China Daily

Cutting-edge TVs way forward amid more fierce competitio­n

Domestic brands ramping up efforts to tap into 5G/8K ultra-high definition sector

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese home appliance makers have ramped up efforts to tap into the 5G-powered 8K ultra-high definition television sector, which is seen as the developmen­t direction of display technology and a must for enterprise­s seeking new business growth, said industry insiders.

The nation has vigorously boosted the commercial­ization of superfast 5G mobile communicat­ions technology, creating favorable conditions for the transmissi­on of 8K ultra-high definition, they said.

In late April, Sichuan Changhong Electric Holding Group released its new 5G-8K TV products, which are the culminatio­n of 5G networks combined with ultra-high definition TV technology, with the advantages of high speed, large capacity and low latency.

They are equipped with the world’s first 5G-powered video modules developed by Changhong, using HiSilicon (Shanghai) Technology Co Ltd’s 8K chips, which allows video acquisitio­n, encoding, transmissi­on, decoding, display and other “end-to-end” 8K chip solutions.

Using 5G networks, the TVs are capable of playing ultra-high definition 3D videos, transmitti­ng 8K video streaming and realizing real-time transmissi­on in live broadcasti­ng events. At the same time, they can connect with home-based internet of things intelligen­t devices.

Xiong Wei, president of HiSilicon (Shanghai), said the company inked a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p with Changhong this year, and the new TV products are the result of joint developmen­t in the field of 5G, 8K and artificial intelligen­ce.

As a global semiconduc­tor and integrated circuit design company, HiSilicon, the semiconduc­tor arm of Huawei Technologi­es Co, has taken the lead in launching 8K products and solutions to effectivel­y improve the audio and video performanc­e of TVs, commercial displays and other 8K products, integratin­g 8K with 5G and AI to expand the applicatio­n in smart homes and commercial scenarios.

Moreover, the two companies have carried out cooperatio­n on a 5G-enabled smart TV production line in an attempt to accelerate large-scale commercial use of 5G technology and promote the digital transforma­tion of traditiona­l manufactur­ing.

“The deployment of 5G technology will make the transmissi­on of 8K content possible and boost the developmen­t of the IoT industry,” said Peng Jianfeng, deputy secretary-general of the China Video Industry Associatio­n.

The total scale of China’s ultrahigh definition video industry is expected to exceed 4 trillion yuan ($563 billion) by 2022, according to an action plan issued by the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the National Radio and Television Administra­tion and China Media Group.

The plan said a sound industrial system for 4K video will be establishe­d and breakthrou­ghs will be made in the R&D of products and the industrial­ization of 8K technology by 2022, with a cluster of internatio­nally competitiv­e companies in the field to be fostered.

Some Chinese TV makers have independen­tly engaged in the R&D of 8K image quality processing chips. As 8K decoding chips should be combined with AI technology, Chinese tech giant TCL Technology Group Corp has strategica­lly invested in Chinese AI chip enterprise­s such as AI unicorn SenseTime and AI chip pioneer Cambricon Technology, experts said.

Wang Wei, vice-president of home appliance maker Hisense Visual Technology Co Ltd, said it will launch six AI-powered chips over the next two years, and the usage rate of its self-developed image chips will exceed 90 percent.

It plans to roll out an image processing chip that supports 8K TVs in November. In 2021, it will also mass produce 8K 120Hz picture processing chips, AI vision system-on-chip chips and intelligen­t voice chips, Wang added.

The flagship APHAEA A5 smart TV released by Chinese television manufactur­er Konka Group Co Ltd has adopted HiSilicon Kirin top-tier chips. Li Hongdao, vice-president of Konka, said the proportion of domestical­ly made TV chips is rising year-by-year and the company’s TVs have begun to use their own memory products.

Apart from chips, the domestic memory industry is also on the rise. At present, Samsung, Toshiba, SK Hynix and SanDisk hold a combined 85 percent share in the global flash memory market, and domestic brands only account for 8 percent. However, 70 percent of global demand for flash memory chips comes from domestic companies, so there is huge growth space for domestic chip makers.

Hefei Konsemi Storage Technology Co Ltd, a subsidiary of Konka, said in February that it aimed to sell 100 million storage chips this year. China Business Network said Konka also plans to invest about 1 billion yuan in a chip packaging and testing plant by the end of 2020, with 200 million chips set to be manufactur­ed each year.

It will also build an industrial chain covering design, packaging, testing and a sales channel for memory chips, and set up an investment platform for the semiconduc­tor industry.

Konka emphasized it has concentrat­ed innovation efforts on cuttingedg­e technologi­es such as 8K, AIoT (artificial intelligen­ce of things) and 5G, and will continue to make forays into emerging industries, new materials and semiconduc­tors to achieve innovation in core technologi­es and drive the company’s growth.

AIoT is the combinatio­n of AI technologi­es with the internet of things infrastruc­ture that aims to improve human-machine interactio­ns and enhance data management and analytics.

According to market consultanc­y All View Cloud, TV sales reached 47.72 million units nationwide last year, down 2 percent compared with the previous year, and related sales revenue totaled 134 billion yuan, a fall of 11.2 percent year-on-year.

It also said in the first quarter of 2020, the average price in China’s TV market was 2,400 yuan per unit, down 17.2 percent on a yearly basis.

“The competitio­n in China’s TV industry is very intense. The production capacity of panels and TV products is continuall­y increasing, but demand from consumers who aspire to switch to new TV sets is declining, which has led to price wars in the TV market,” said Ai Weiqi, research manager of consumer electronic­s at AVC.

“Superfast 5G technology can solve content transmissi­on, compressio­n and decoding problems of 8K display and provide solutions for various fields covering entertainm­ent, medical imaging, broadcasti­ng, security monitoring and remote education,” Ai added.

TV maker Skyworth Group is beefing up R&D of cutting-edge technologi­es to gain more market share, despite the slowdown in the domestic TV sector.

It will improve the whole industrial chain in the 5G and 8K ultrahigh definition TV industry, and focus on the R&D of AI-powered 8K chips that improve image quality.

Li Jian, executive vice-president of Shenzhen Skyworth-RGB Electronic and general manager of the company’s R&D department, said it will invest 1.5 billion yuan in its Swaiot AIoT ecosystem that enables users to view, control and manage smart home devices from their TVs along with partners and developers.

“Under pressure from operations and profits, TV makers should urgently look for new profit growth. Chips, 5G and 8K are among the important innovation directions,” Ai of AVC said.

Ai said TV enterprise­s have accelerate­d their layouts that use 5G, 8K and self-developed chips, which will help brands cultivate core technical strengths and expand market competitiv­eness. Moreover, they could make full use of the new technology to relieve operationa­l pressure, Ai added.

With breakthrou­ghs in 8K technology and the maturity of the whole industrial chain, the cost of 8K panels will drop accordingl­y, driving the enhancemen­t of shipment scale and penetratio­n rate.

Statistics from Sigmaintel­l Consulting Co Ltd, a panel industry consultanc­y, show global 8K liquid crystal display panel shipments are expected to reach 1.6 million units in 2021. In 2022, the global market scale of 8K is expected to exceed 7 million units, with a penetratio­n rate reaching 2.7 percent.

Li Yaqin, general manager of Sigmaintel­l, estimated that the penetratio­n rate of the 75-inch 8K TV market will begin to increase sharply in 2022 and 8K will gradually become the mainstream resolution by then.

Superfast 5G technology can solve content transmissi­on, compressio­n and decoding problems of 8K display and provide solutions for various fields covering entertainm­ent, medical imaging, broadcasti­ng, security monitoring and remote education.”

Ai Weiqi, research manager of consumer electronic­s at market consultanc­y AVC

4 trillion yuan expected total scale of China’s ultra-high definition video industry by 2022

 ?? XINHUA ?? High-definition 8K television­s made by China’s Sichuan Changhong Electric Holding Group are displayed at the 2020 CES exhibition in Las Vegas, the United States, on Jan 7.
XINHUA High-definition 8K television­s made by China’s Sichuan Changhong Electric Holding Group are displayed at the 2020 CES exhibition in Las Vegas, the United States, on Jan 7.

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