Sony finally enters the True RGB television era with the Bravia 9 II and Bravia 7 II — two models that replace conventional Mini LED backlighting with independently driven red, green, and blue LEDs. The result: broader colour volume, up to 4,000 nits of peak brightness, and zero burn-in risk. This guide breaks down the technology, compares both models side by side, and explains how they stack up against Samsung's Micro RGB and OLED.
In 2026, a new category of display technology has arrived in residential TVs — and it changes everything. This guide breaks down the key differences between OLED, QD-OLED, Micro RGB (Samsung), and True RGB (Sony), compares them on the criteria that matter most, and helps you choose the right technology for you
Samsung's 2026 TV lineup is the most significant leap in display technology since OLED — introducing Micro RGB, a brand-new panel category, alongside a brighter QD-OLED flagship, democratized Mini LED, and a conversational AI assistant built right into the experience. Here's everything you need to know to find the right Samsung TV for you.
Discover how Mini RGB and Micro RGB technologies are redefining television performance, combining extreme brightness, true color precision, and OLED-like contrast to shape the future of high-end displays.
DEL, OLED, QLED… le monde des téléviseurs peut sembler bien compliqué pour plusieurs d’entre nous. Une pluie de termes techniques se mêle à d’autres termes purement marketing. Comment s’y prendre pour démêler le tout et faire un choix éclairé?
Depuis l’arrivée des télévisions UHD 4K, nous entendons parler couramment des technologies HDR et Dolby Vision. Moins publicisés que l’ultra haute définition, le HDR (de l’anglais High Dynamic Range, pour « plage dynamique élevée ») et le Dolby Vision sont toutefois tout aussi importants et se veulent une véritable révolution dans le monde de la télévision et de l’image.