Xiaomi to launch Mi TV Q1 75" on 23rd March - QLED, 192 Zones, 120Hz

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Lux is an OLED AFAIK. The price may be inaccurate. Following is a quote from MI site.

Mi TV Lux is a unique TV by Xiaomi which is made of glass.
This is not a traditional TV at all - it lacks a back panel, and the display is a 55-inch glass panel.
OLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate creates the most immersive image.
The thickness of the display is 5.7 mm.
The TV is made of special tempered glass which is more durable than the usual glass.
The TV base has all the popular ports for connecting other gadgets.
The device is powered by a MediaTek 9650 processor with Mali G52 MC1 graphics.
The TV is running on the operating system MIUI for smart TVs.
There is support for Dolby Atmos and Chinese voice assistant.
Following from GizmoChina
Today, the Xiaomi Mi TV LUX Ultra 82-inch 8K 5G is officially available for purchase in China, carrying a price tag of 49,999 yuan, which roughly converts to $7,489. On the other hand, the 4K variant of the same is up for pre-order for a price of 9,999 yuan, which is about $1,498, and will start shipping next month.
 
Thanks buddy. The one you liked is MI QLED 75. The other is the new LG C1 OLED. There is one more for you
Umm, not to be a nit-picker but comparing phone camera photos of TV screens is a bit pointless.
The (phone) camera adjusts contrast, color temperature, dynamic range, and more dynamically.
If you really want to judge using photos, shoot with a camera that lets you lock down all parameters, shoot in raw, edit that raw with the same develop settings in a software. :D

For example, if the C1 oled is brighter or more contrast-y than the FALD panel, the camera will compensate by crushing the highlights or flattening the contrast respectively. :)
 
First one
That was MI QLED 75.
Umm, not to be a nit-picker but comparing phone camera photos of TV screens is a bit pointless.
The (phone) camera adjusts contrast, color temperature, dynamic range, and more dynamically.
If you really want to judge using photos, shoot with a camera that lets you lock down all parameters, shoot in raw, edit that raw with the same develop settings in a software. :D

For example, if the C1 oled is brighter or more contrast-y than the FALD panel, the camera will compensate by crushing the highlights or flattening the contrast respectively. :)
I know bro, I tried my best to capture true images. They look very much the same to me. I will upload complete video of both too. I get your point too . This is just for fun and nothing else . My observation was that mi fald ( using my settings) looked definitely better in real life than C1 in these particular scenes. Scenes like these don't need infinite contrast btw, you can't distinguish here. It's the night scenes where OLED can make more depth. And this was SDR video and FALD was definitely brighter here. Alteast double bright.

Video for MI QLED 75 right now. Lg C1 OLED soon
 
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Wait, you picked the frames from a different person. That makes the entire test invalid because of different cameras used.
No Both S10+. Just recording person different. He tried his best I tried my best. That's it. I will upload my OLED then for your peace of mind. Mine is Sony though.
 

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No Both S10+. Just recording person different. He tried his best I tried my best. That's it. I will upload my OLED then for your peace of mind. Mine is Sony though.
Even that's not a valid comparison. Phones will change settings on different inputs. If a TV is brighter it will expose higher for example. Not to mention that you're compressing the output to sRGB via your phone.

That's why any good TV reviewer like HDTVTest say in every video to trust his numbers and not what you see on screen.

It's like deciding which speakers to buy based on YouTube sound tests.
 
Even that's not a valid comparison. Phones will change settings on different inputs. If a TV is brighter it will expose higher for example. Not to mention that you're compressing the output to sRGB via your phone.

That's why any good TV reviewer like HDTVTest say in every video to trust his numbers and not what you see on screen.

It's like deciding which speakers to buy based on YouTube sound tests.
Bhai never told that my video is better than HDTV. Just shared my video. Didn't tag you to comment. You can ignore it. Plus OLED can never match the color volume of a. OLED. This is something I watch daily.
 
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