Tag: QD-Oled

  • Hisense renews FIFA World Cup tie-up, flaunts RGB-MiniLED might at IFA 2025

    Hisense renews FIFA World Cup tie-up, flaunts RGB-MiniLED might at IFA 2025

    BERLIN: Hisense, the Chinese consumer electronics and appliances giant, has confirmed it will continue as an official sponsor of the FIFA World Cup, extending a partnership first struck in 2018. The announcement came at IFA 2025 in Berlin, where the company also unveiled a raft of television and smart-home innovations designed to cement its position as a leader in next-generation display technology.

    For Hisense, football has become a stage for technology theatre. It began with logo visibility at Russia 2018, grew into content collaboration on FIFA+ in 2022, stretched to technology integration in VAR systems at the FIFA Club World Cup earlier this year, and will now culminate in sponsorship of the 2026 World Cup, the first to feature 48 teams across three host nations. Each milestone, the firm insists, has tightened its grip on global brand recognition.

    Hisense Group  vice-president  Catherine Fang said the strategy was rooted in four principles: being technology driven, user oriented, culturally grounded and smart-service focused. “Every unforgettable moment starts with the right experience,” she told the Berlin audience. “Our role is to help fans own that moment.”

    At the heart of Hisense’s display push is RGB-MiniLed — a technology it claims to have invented and now positioned as a rival to OLED. The firm has already paraded the world’s largest RGB-MiniLED set, a 116-inch television, and at IFA it showed refinements that deliver purer colours, sharper contrast and brightness levels beyond those of QD-Oled. The screens, it boasts, can achieve 100 per cent of the BT.2020 colour gamut, promising images that replicate reality.

    FIFA is sold on the promise. Romy Gai, the governing body’s chief business officer, called Hisense’s technology a way to bring “billions of fans” closer to the World Cup in 2026. For Hisense, the ambition is bolder still: to transform living rooms into front-row seats, ensuring households in Lagos, Lahore and London feel the same drama as fans in Los Angeles or Mexico City.

    IFA 2025 itself has become a proving ground. Under the banner “Own the Moment”, Hisense is staging a media showcase at City Cube Berlin and a larger product exhibition at Hall 23a, with television walls, AI-driven appliances and connected living systems all on display. The message is simple: Hisense wants to set the benchmark not just for picture quality but for how households interact with technology.

    Founded in 1969 in Qingdao, Hisense now operates in more than 160 countries and, according to Omdia, leads the world in sales of 100-inch and larger televisions in the first half of 2025. Its continued sponsorship of the World Cup suggests that, in the battle for consumer attention, football remains the ultimate shop window. For Hisense, the combination of sports spectacle and cutting-edge screens is designed to make sure that when fans cheer, they do so in front of a Hisense.

  • Samsung working on tech breakthrough for 27-inch QD-Oled monitors for esports

    Samsung working on tech breakthrough for 27-inch QD-Oled monitors for esports

    MUMBAI: For gaming enthusiasts, this could be a godsend. Samsung Electronics’ offshoot Samsung Display is currently working on a new Oled display monitor which would have a record refresh rate, according to reports appearing in south Korean media. The size of the panel: 27 inches. The resolution: QHD/1440p or 2560X1440 pixels. 

    Samsung Display combined quantum dot and Oled technologies, and achieved a 500Hz refresh rate for the first time ever in an Oled display. The display is in the final stage of development as Samsung seeks potential partners in the gaming monitor business. Hope is that commercial manufacture should begin soon and the new panel should arrive in the market during H1 2025.  Some say the launch could happen at CES in Las Vegas. The product is targeted at the esports market. 

    QD-Oled panels reportedly offer superior color vibrancy, deeper contrast, and improved performance compared to traditional LCDs. This aligns with a broader trend among display manufacturers like LG Display and Samsung Display, which  compete to push the boundaries of high-refresh-rate Oled  monitors in various sizes and resolutions. Samsung’s  achievement has outpaced the displays of both Asus and LG which have a maximum refresh rate of 480Hz.

    Research firms have pointed out that while  annual global monitor growth is expected to take place at one per cent between now and 2028, Oled displays are expected to grow at 34 per cent per annum on an average in the same period.

    According to online panel analyst, FlatPanelsHD , 2025 could come up with a new trend for 27-inch QD-Oled and WOled monitors.Chinese firm  Light Soul is burning the midnight oil and is planning to release a 27-inch QD-Oled monitor with a 4k resolution, a 240 Hz refresh rate and 1000 nits of peak brightness. 

    On the larger screen front, LG is likely to come out with a 45 inch WOled panel with a resolution greater than the existing 3440×1440 pixel resolution. Expectations are that it could touch  5120×2160 pixels. This could spark off another trend for monitor manufacturers and developers.