ЖК может, когда захочет
Единственный недостаток подобной новой техники - это конечно цена, которую вряд-ли кто может из нас позволить отвалить за подобный телик
The scene in Gravity where Sandra Bullock is floating away tumbling into the black void of space has in the past been a real torture test for the Samsung Q9FN, but the Q900R nailed this perfectly and, again, displayed more shadow details and stars than the LG C8 OLED we used for comparison. The OLED had deeper, inkier blacks and the advantage of per pixel dimming, but the Q900R resolved more details and stars without vignetting or crushing and produced a stable and impactful image. It was very impressive indeed.
One favourite torture test for LED LCD TVs using FALD backlights is Gravity on Blu-ray and Sandra Bullock tumbling away from the Space Shuttle into the darkness of the stars, with the Milky Way behind her. As she tumbles her suit changes from white with lights to a dark shadow set against the star field. On some TVs, including the early firmware enabled Q9FN; the local dimming would create a vignette effect and crush some of the stars and pulse as the character tumbled. On the Q900R, we tested it in a side-by-side comparison with a 55-inch LG C8 and Q9FN with this scene. I have to be honest and say that the Q900R really impressed me with its performance with this content, so much so that I actually said 'wow'. The local dimming doesn’t cause any issues with vignetting or crushing the star field, with just a slight darkening on the bottom left of the frame, but the amount of shadow detailing and stars visible is astonishing. Even the C8 with its inky deep, solid black levels couldn’t produce the same amount of shadow detail impact, as its true dynamic range removed some of the lighter stars given its contrast jump. We also found the upscaling of the Q900R with this scene to be extremely impressive, as it was with terrestrial TV channels in 1080i and we also sampled HD content from Netflix with the same results.