Skip to main content

Interview: Samsung’s Dave Das explains what makes QLED TVs so special

Just two years ago we spoke with Samsung Senior Vice President of Consumer Electronics, Dave Das, about SUHD, the company’s branded take on a premium 4K Ultra HD TV. But Samsung is moving on, ditching the SUHD moniker for a new acronym: QLED. In our interview, Das explains what makes QLED special.

QLED is more than just a new set of marketing-friendly letters, though. The new name reflects new priorities Samsung has taken on in terms of design philosophy, as well a couple of picture quality improvements.

Recommended Videos

It’s important to note that QLED is not yet the emissive technology we were told about in September at Europe’s IFA conference — that premium TV is apparently still in the works — but Samsung does say that modifications to its quantum dots have resulted in two key improvements: A better viewing angle, and better black levels resulting in improved contrast. While we can’t vouch for the latter, the improved viewing angle is obvious — what once was a very limiting factor for Samsung’s LED TVs has now been shed.

Samsung also claims its QLED TVs are cable of 1,200-1,500 nits of peak brightness, which will add quite a bit of sparkle to HDR content, and bodes well for SDR content, too. QLED is also claimed to be able to produce 100 percent of the DCI-P3 color space, making it well suited to reproduce movies exactly as presented in commercial theaters.

Outside of picture quality, QLED offers some notable design additions, not the least of which is a fiber-optic signal cable barely thicker than fishing line which carries the TV’s video signal from a small connection hub up to the TV. The cable is virtually invisible when strung up a wall, and should make clean installations a bit easier for those who have a power outlet located where the TV will be placed.

Getting a QLED TV mounted on the wall is also claimed to be easier using Samsung’s proprietary wall-mounting hardware, which also offers the benefit of a nearly flush installation. Samsung claims that installing its wall mount solution should only take about 15 minutes, though using a conventional mount is still an option.

For those not mounting the TV, two table-stop stands are available, one of which swivels, and there’s a gorgeous floor-stand available as well.

QLED models sport all-metal finishes and extremely thin bezels for TVs that look as good turned off as they do when turned on.

Three QLED series exist, including Q9, Q8, and Q7. Pricing and lauch date, as usual, are not being disclosed at CES 2017.

Caleb Denison
Digital Trends Editor at Large Caleb Denison is a sought-after writer, speaker, and television correspondent with unmatched…
Samsung looks for an ‘Age of Togetherness’ with new Frame, Neo QLED TVs
Samsung Micro LED 2022.

Samsung kicks off CES 2022 doing what Samsung does best -- taking its line of many televisions, already great in their own right, and kicking things up yet another notch. Smarter, brighter, better, easier to use -- all the things that make a TV more than a TV in an era in which we're spending more time in front of the TV than ever.

On the front side of things is a new home screen, "a testament to our vision for the future of TVs." Samsung is paring things down to three main hubs -- a Media Screen, a Gaming Hub, and Ambient Mode. They're mostly self-explanatory. If it's something you're going to watch (via Samsung's built-in apps, anyway), you'll get to it from the Media Screen. The Gaming Hub gets you into your cloud-based gaming services and consoles and works with existing third-party controllers and headsets. And the Ambient Mode makes it easier than ever to have something pleasant on the screen when you're not actively watching or playing something. That includes art, or photos, or even NFTs, because it's 2022 and it's all about non-fungible tokens, apparently.

Read more
The best TVs of CES 2021: Samsung, Sony, LG, TCL
A Sony television sits in a futuristic-looking living room.

I can’t recall a year when I wasn’t impressed by the TVs I saw at CES. Maybe that’s just because I love TVs so much. There have been some ... I'll call them tepid years ... but CES 2021? This year was red hot.

Given this has been a virtual event, it was a challenge to put eyes on these TVs, but we did manage to get in-person looks at many of the TVs on this list. For those that we didn't? I relied on over a decade of experience to inform my decision. So, let’s run down all the best TVs from CES 2021, along with a couple of new TV trends that took us by surprise. You can also take a look at our list of the best new soundbars from CES 2021.

Read more
Samsung’s 2021 TV lineup surprises with Neo QLED, more MicroLED TVs
Smasung Micro LED 2021

CES 2021 is here -- well, virtually, anyway -- but Samsung had already announced its premium 2021 TV lineup ahead of the event. This announcement comes alongside an early look at the Sony 2021 TV lineup and LG's QNED Mini-LED options, making TVs the center of attention before the event.  Let’s break down everything Samsung has announced for new TVs in 2021.

We'll go big right off the bat. You may have already heard that Samsung unveiled a 110-inch version of its MicroLED TV. But what Samsung has just announced is that it is also bringing a 99- and 88-inch version of its microLED TV into homes this year.

Read more