If you’re fed up with looking at the giant black screen sitting in the corner of your living room, LG might have the answer. The Korean technology firm has just unveiled its latest gogglebox at the CES technology show in Las Vegas which features a totally transparent design. That means you can place it in the lounge and see right through it making it a little more appealing for anyone with design design-conscious home.
It’s called the SIGNATURE OLED T with LG promising that it will give users the “unprecedented freedom to meticulously curate their living spaces.”
Other features include 4K technology for a pin-sharp image along with Always-On-Display technology that allows users to show art and photos when not watching content.
This TV also gets LG’s T-Bar function that offers a helpful info-ticker that runs along the lower part of the screen. The T-Bar displays news alerts, weather updates, or the title of songs being played while the rest of the screen presents a clear, unobstructed view of the space behind it.
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LG)
If you’re worried that the stunning look of this clear telly will be ruined by cables don’t be. The SIGNATURE OLED T features LG’s clever technology which beams content from set-top devices such as Sky Q or Apple TV to the big screen wirelessly via a Zero Connect Box.
“An incredible feat of consumer-driven innovation, LG SIGNATURE OLED T offers brand-new screen experiences plus the picture quality and performance of our award-winning OLED technology,” said Park Hyoung-sei, president of the LG Home Entertainment Company. “LG’s transparent OLED gives customers greater freedom to curate their living spaces, completely redefining what’s possible and pointing the way to an exciting future for the television industry.”
There’s no word on a launch date or pricing just yet but don’t expect it to be cheap.
It’s not just LG showing off se-through screens at CES with Samsung also revealing new technology called Transparent MICRO LED. This piece of glass transforms into a telly at the touch of a button with the firm hoping it could be to make windows more interactive and tellies less intrusive.