• Remember the weird, wireless wall-hung OLED TV? Now it can stop i

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Fri Oct 6 11:30:04 2023
    Remember the weird, wireless wall-hung OLED TV? Now it can stop itself from falling

    Date:
    Fri, 06 Oct 2023 11:20:30 +0000

    Description:
    Displace TV's unusual wall-mounted TV doesn't use a hook or a mount: it sucks itself to the wall and has a very unusual system to prevent fall damage.

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    Displace TV isn't like other TVs: even the best OLED TVs that have clever wireless tech need a power cable, but the Displace TV gets rid of that too. Instead, it has four rechargeable lithium-ion batteries inside it, which promise to give you a whole month of six-hour daily viewing before it's time for a recharge. And now it's added something that to the best of our
    knowledge no other TVs have: a zipline!

    The zipline is there because the Displace TV doesn't hang from a hook or bolt to a mount. The L in its OLED might as well stand for Lamprey, because it sucks itself to the wall. And that's fine when you've got battery power, but what happens when your $3,000 TV runs out of puff, you don't swap the battery in time and it can't suck any more? That's where the zipline comes in. Its
    job is to prevent a high-tech Humpty Dumpty horror happening to your high-end TV. What happens to your Displace TV when the batteries run out? Angled view of Displace TV panel. Note the battery slots (at top and bottom) and side handles for mounting and dismounting. Also note screen glare. (Image credit: Future)

    When we first saw the worlds first fully wireless OLED TV , we though it was completely off the hook. Displace has now published a press release that goes into detail about its disaster avoidance."If the vacuum pumps are in danger
    of not maintaining a seal or the walls integrity falters," it says, "the Displace TV automatically deploys four quick adhesives for stability". Not only that, but the adhesives do much the same job as Spider-Man's web shooters, as they're anchor points for what displace calls its "self-lowering landing gear system. A zipline feeds itself slowly from a height of up to 10 feet, while the TV also pops out reusable foam to ensure a soft landing.

    In all honestly, this sounds more fun to watch than most of the things we stream and that's before you get to the built-in warning system that'll blast sound and flash lights to alert children, pets and unsuspecting partners. I'd want to set that off deliberately to scare my kids.

    It's all very impressive and looks hugely entertaining, but the core
    questions regarding the TV remain: is it any good, and is it as good as LG's wireless OLED M TV ? That's as good as wireless TV tech gets right now, and it's fair to say that LG has far more resources, engineers and money to spend on its R&D than Displace. We won't know for sure until the Displace TV actually ships, and that's still a few months away: it's scheduled for launch in the second quarter of 2024. You might also like I tried LGs wireless OLED TV with 4K 120Hz video; its impressive, but with 3 problems The best TV deals in October 2023 The first totally wireless TV can be stuck to any wall you like



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/televisions/remember-the-weird-wireless-wall-hung-ol ed-tv-now-it-can-stop-itself-from-falling


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