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Samsung Quantum Dot screen to replace OLED Apple Studio Display monitor

(Image Credit Google)
After adopting the iPhone's screen technology for its MacBooks and iPads, Apple may begin outfitting its standalone displays with OLED panels as well. A 27-inch Quantum Dot OLED screen developed by Samsung may be chosen for the upcoming Apple Studio Display all-in-one computers. According to industry insiders, Samsung is getting ready to launch a Quantum Dot OLED display line that will allegedly provide Apple with 27-inch panels. Since the current Apple Studio Display model is exactly that size, Apple is likely to be Samsung's A5 production line's "primary customer," and Apple may use the line alone for Apple's future orders. [caption id="attachment_61039" align="aligncenter" width="1600"]OLED Apple Studio Display monitor Image credit: theverge[/caption] The present 27-inch Studio Display from Apple has a 5K IPS Retina panel with a resolution of 5120 by 2880 pixels and a brightness of 600 nits, so this may be the company's first monitor to use an OLED display. Similar remarks may be made about Apple's most expensive 32-inch Pro Display XDR, which also has IPS panel technology. According to rumors, Apple will release its first OLED-screen tablet in 2024 with components from Samsung and LG, followed by MacBooks in 2025 and, eventually, laptops with foldable displays. The Quantum Dot OLED should arrive at that time. During today's speech at an OLED industry seminar in Seoul, Apple Studio Display also gave the UBI research firm leader a tip. For this reason, "OLED panels with phosphorescent devices will be mass-produced in 2025," Samsung is trying to make the life duration of blue light-emitting diodes comparable to that of red and green ones. [caption id="attachment_61038" align="aligncenter" width="1600"]OLED Apple Studio Display monitor Image credit: macrumors[/caption] In the beginning, Samsung will deploy dual-stack 8th-generation tandem OLED screens for iPads and MacBooks in the 10–20 inch size since that is one way to achieve OLED screen longevity without burn-in for products like laptops or tablets that are frequently used longer than phones. Samsung is also developing this long-life OLED technology, and LG already has dual-stack OLED panels for automotive applications on the market that Mercedes uses for the Hyperscreen in its electric vehicles. The commercialization of the blue phosphorescent device would promote a quantum leap in the OLED business, according to the CEO of UBI. "The blue phosphorescent device, which is being developed by Samsung Display and UDC, respectively, is extremely likely to be commercialized in 2025." When Samsung creates QD-OLED panels for gadgets larger than 20 inches in diagonal, like Apple's upcoming Studio Displays, it will specifically be aiming for this technology. [caption id="attachment_61040" align="aligncenter" width="1600"]OLED Apple Studio Display monitor Image credit:[/caption] The dual-stack method might not be required at all since this new generation Quantum Dot OLED will enable faster and easier mass production in addition to paving the way for reducing the number of light-emitting layers and hence the material cost. The transition from liquid crystal displays to OLED will quicken once the blue phosphorescent technology is created, the head of UBI's research firm continued.

By Raulf Hernes

If you ask me raulf means ALL ABOUT TECH!!

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