الثلاثاء، 15 نوفمبر 2016

The best Samsung TV 2016


Samsung’s TVs are rich in features designed to maximize the quality of the viewing and content access experience while also providing a generally excellent level of smart TV interactivity and processing speed for all the functions that come with these technologies.
On the other hand, Samsung’s 4K UHD TVs can sometimes lag in certain rendering technologies which are supposed to provide an ideal level of motion refresh and effectively display fast video or gaming action, especially in native 4K ultra HD resolution.
That said, here are several of the key specific technologies which are found in many or all of Samsung’s 4K televisions for 2015 and for 2016 in particular. We’ve broken them down by TV type.

All of the 2016 SUHD TVs, from the KS8000 up to the flagship KS9800 are certified by the UHD Alliance as as TVs that match the Ultra HD Premium color and dynamic range standards for HDR. This effectively means that these TVs all deliver peak brightness that reaches up to beyond 1100 nits and rich deep black levels that go no brighter than 0.05 nits for “completely black” spaces on the screen. This HDR spec also means that these 4K TVs deliver Wide Color Gamut, with more than 92% DCI-P3 Color Space coverage and 10-bit color variation for much smoother color gradation.
The result is a high contrast level that completely beats what was the case in any 2015 SUHD TV, even the flagship JS9500 for last year. In comparison to their 2015 counterparts, the HDR-capable 2016 SUHD TVs are the definite winners in terms of superior, more advanced HDR specs. The main technologies behind this high dynamic range quality consist of Samsung’s HDR1000 spec, Peak Illuminator Pro, Precision Black and Samsung’s supplementary Ultra Black technology. All these fancy names aside, what you need to know about the capacities of the KS-Seris of 4K TVs is that they deliver high quality HDR with high peak brightness that can exceed 1450 nits in spot tests and deep black levels which can go as low as 0.001 nits with local dimming activated.
The 2015 JU-Series 4K TVs and the 2016 KU-Series models don’t offer these above levels of HDR. Instead, they can read HDR metadata through their HDMI 2.0a ports and do offer enhanced contrast, peak brightness and black levels. The enhanced peak brightness and deep black levels apply particularly to the 2016 KU-Series models.

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