TVs that fold, roll and bend!
LG has just revealed a consumer version of its roll-up TV set at the CES trade show in Las Vegas. The TV set is built on a concept unveiled last year, in which the screen retracts into a base automatically at the touch of a button like a garage door. As a result, when the television is not in use, it is less obtrusive: “It brings freedom of design to space, without the limitations of a wall,” LG senior vice president of marketing David VanderWaal said while introducing the OLED TV R on Monday.
The Signature OLED TV R also sports organic light-emitting diode, or OLED, screens that produce crisper images and fold more easily than traditional liquid-crystal display, or LCD, panels. Finally, LG has added a 100-watt Dolby Atmos speaker to the model for powerful built-in audio.
LG plans to sell the device in the US before the end of 2019, but has yet to reveal the month or price. Experts say the technology is unlikely to become a mass-market proposition for many years to come, though."It's a 4K set rather than 8K, so you could argue there's a compromise there - but otherwise this is a very high-end design that is going to be very costly," commented Jack Wetherill from the consultancy Futuresource.
The South Korean firm also showed off another TV that will compete with the fold-out model for flagship status: a 88in (224cm) model that was described as being the biggest OLED set to date.
In addition, the firm said that its wider range of new smart TVs would include access to Amazon Alexa as well as Google's Assistant, which was added last year. Relatively few devices have worked with both the two rival virtual assistants to date. Speaker-maker Sonos has notably taken longer than expected to deliver on its promise of combining the two into a single device. In LG's case, the two platforms will be accessed via its own ThinQ software rather than directly. Its press conference showed a user commanding them via a TV remote control, suggesting that a different button press determined which of the two assistants was invoked.
Samsung's new TVs will also offer access to both Amazon and Google's platforms too, although it will prioritise its own smart assistant Bixby. "I see it as an acceptance that there's a very large group of users already using Google and Amazon's AIs," remarked Paul Gagnon from the consultancy IHS Markit. "It would be pretty hard for a company to stand in the way of that progress and not cut out potential buyers."
LG also said its TVs would be among the first to natively support Apple's AirPlay technology, allowing them to stream footage and audio from iPhones and iPads as well as be controlled by Siri.
LG dedicated much of the rest of its press conference to explaining how its household appliances could be made to anticipate their owners' wishes by allowing the company to monitor people's wider behaviour. One example involved its ThinQ software offering to deploy a robot vacuum because it had detected its owner picking up another cleaning device. Another involved the dishwasher ordering itself new detergent because it had run out.
In general, things ran much more smoothly than last year when the firm's US marketing chief David VanderWaal tried to demo a robot called Cloi, which repeatedly ignored his commands. However, right at the end of the latest event the firm failed to mute his microphone, so that the last words heard were Mr VanderWaal saying: "That's a wrap - one glitch on the video." One of the firm's displays failed to work as intended during the TV section of the press conference.
Will “rollable” and OLED televisions revive a consumer electronics business that’s grappling with price declines and stiffening Chinese competition? The South Korean conglomerate is shedding workers to streamline and refocus around future technologies, such as flexible displays. OLED TVs account for just 1.1% of the market this year while LCDs claim almost 98% , according to estimates by data tracker Statista. But unit shipments of OLED TVs are projected to grow 70% next year to 4 million from an estimated 2.35 million this year, it said. The growth of OLED TVs in the coming years is inevitable as the technology becomes older and manufacturers find cheaper alternatives and reduce the cost of production, thus reducing the overall final price for the consumer. So we can expect to see more OLED TVs hitting the market in 2019.