TL;DR: ASUS unveils the ProArt Display PA32KCX, the world's first 32-inch 8K HDR Mini LED professional monitor featuring 4032-zone local dimming, 1200 nits peak brightness, true 10-bit color, built-in ...
Professional displays are very different from those designed for gaming, where response times, refresh rates, and VRR support sit pretty high on the list. Professional displays are about accurate and ...
One of the best trends in tech over the past several years is big screen TVs getting increasingly bigger and less expensive. Underscoring that fact like an emphatic dunk at the end of a basketball ...
Experience the next level of display performance with this Special OLED Travel Demo — filmed in stunning 12K HDR, powered by Dolby Vision™, and delivered at a smooth 120FPS. This cinematic showcase is ...
TCL’s X11L SQD-Mini LED TV debuts at CES 2026 in large sizes with premium pricing, boasting 100% BT.2020 color, 20,000 dimming zones and up to 10,000 nits HDR. At the core of the X11L is TCL’s new SQD ...
If you need a high-end display for photo or video editing, Asus' new ProArt model could be the perfect solution. It's the world's first 8K resolution, Mini-LED HDR display, delivering unprecedented ...
Our expert, award-winning staff selects the products we cover and rigorously researches and tests our top picks. If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. TV and home video editor Ty ...
Tom Sampson writes: Is there any benefit to using my Apple TV 4K in a 2.1 HDMI port versus 2.0? No. There is no benefit to using an HDMI 2.1 port for an Apple TV 4K. The only consumer hardware I’m ...
Panasonic's 65-inch TH-65PX950DX Mini LED TV is a premium mid-range TV and a part of its Shinobi Pro series. At its current price of about Rs 1,70,000, the TV offers flagship features like a 4K HDR ...
HDR-capable gaming monitors are all the rage these days. Whether they’re OLED or mini-LED, it’s finally possible to get a really killer HDR experience from your monitor. Until very recently, however, ...
Buying a monitor or TV has become a daunting task these days. When manufacturers aren’t branding their products with acronyms like QLED and OLED, they use confusing terms like mini-LED instead.