The Star Malaysia - Star2

Meet the Modular TV

- By JANKO ROETTGERS

ON THE eve of the Consumer Electronic­s Show (CES), Samsung unveiled what can only be described as a radical departure from the traditiona­l TV: a modular TV that can scale to any possible size, giving consumers the ability to buy as many bezelless modules as they want to combine to a custom-sized screen optimised for their living rooms.

“Screens should not be limited by size,” said Jonghee Han, president of the company’s visual display unit. “Instead, they should blend into any home.”

Samsung still presented the new modular product the way TVs are traditiona­lly being shown off at CES: with an ours is bigger than theirs attitude. The screen on stage measured a whopping 146in.

It was billed as “The Wall” with a spokespers­on explaining that the company had built it with the size of a typical residentia­l room height of eight to nine feet in mind.

But the company is clearly also thinking about giving consumers the ability to assemble much smaller screens, and possibly add to them over time.

“This modular screen can transform into any size,” Han said. “This TV’s modular structure allows consumers to build the screen of their dreams,” added Dave Das, senior vice-president of consumer electronic­s at Samsung Electronic­s America.

How big or small will that dream scale? Samsung wouldn’t say. The company kept mum on many details, including the size of the individual modules and possible resolution­s in different configurat­ions.

Samsung didn’t even let media inspect the device up close, espe- cially keeping nosy photograph­ers at a safe, multiple-feet distance.

However, black scenes during the company’s demo video revealed what looked like a series of vertical tiles, measuring an estimated four by eight inches each, or slightly larger than your average phone screen.

Samsung instead emphasised some of the technology behind the screen, including what the company calls MicroLEDs. These are much smaller than the LEDs used in traditiona­l TVs, and also are supposed to be more powereffic­ient – which could be key to the product’s success, given that Samsung envisions it as a kind of video wall that shows ambient videos throughout the day.

There’s no word yet on how much this modular TV will cost consumers, but Das said that it will be commercial­ly available sometime this year. The company promised further updates in March, when it plans to announce the commercial availabili­ty of its 2018 TVs as well.

Samsung first showed off a modular TV on the CES show floor in 2016. However, back then, the company still treated modular screens as a concept for something that may or may not ever evolve into a product. Now, it seems like Samsung actually believes that it can find a market for such screens. — Reuters

 ?? — AP ?? Samsung’s ‘The Wall’ modular television on display at the Samsung booth during CES is a whopping 146in.
— AP Samsung’s ‘The Wall’ modular television on display at the Samsung booth during CES is a whopping 146in.

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