.........yo al Blu-ray en Oled lo llamo "Blur ray" , despues de una visualizacion tan exigente para estos menesteres como "Transformers 3" no hay duda, el Oled esta lejos de la impecabilidad......
Display mate : OLED
Response Time and Motion Blur
Motion Blur is a well known issue with LCDs. It arises because the liquid crystal, which is the active element within an LCD, is unable to change its orientation and transmission rapidly enough when the picture changes from one frame to the next. OLEDs, as solid state emissive devices, have very fast Response Times: LG specs the OLED Response Time at 0.1ms, which is more than a factor of 10 faster than LCDs. For a simple test of Motion Blur we photographed a
DisplayMate Test Pattern moving at a very fast 1352 pixels per second using a Nikon DSLR camera with a shutter speed of 1/250th second, which is less than the display’s 120 Hz refresh cycle time. Figure 4 has a screen shot for the OLED TV and a similar screen shot for an LCD TV from a 2011 study. Both TVs have a 120 Hz Refresh Rate. On the LCD TV screen shot it is possible to make out latent images from more than 5 prior refresh cycles. The OLED TV screen shot shows a single sharp image. See our
LCD Response Time and Motion Blur article for more details.
OLED TV Test Result:The OLED screen shot shows no visible Motion Blur or latent images from any previous refresh cycles, so the Response Time is visually indistinguishable from zero with no visible display based Motion Blur.
Trusted reviews : PLASMA
Fast Response Time
Because plasma cells don’t depend on anything physically moving (liquid crystals have to open and close), they can react much more quickly to changes in image content. Panasonic quotes a response time of 0.01ms for its current mainstream plasma TVs, whereas typical LCD response times clock in at between 4ms and 8ms.
All this talk of milliseconds might not sound much on paper, but it can be the difference between moving objects retaining or losing clarity as they cross the screen.
Lcd : 0.4 ms
Oled : 0.1 ms
Plasma : 0.01 ms (Panasonic claimed)
Crt : 0 ms ( 200-400 microsecond ums)
Como dice el texto puede que esto de los miliseconds no parezca gran cosa so bre el papel
pero si nos ponemos exquisitos, nos lo tenemos que poner para todo y se calcula que el Oled
sin interpolacion no permite la visualizacion de al menos un 60 % de la "nitidez de movimiento"
que un visualizador de calidad deberia mostrar,sencillamente no muestra todo lo que viene
en el disco al nivel del plasma y no digamos del rey crt