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Benefits of OLED


Easy to See

From almost any angle, KODAK OLED displays’ brightness and clarity produce the consistent image quality you'd expect from Kodak.

Brightness
Bright, crisp images and video are easy to see from any angle owing to their unsurpassed contrast and luminance.
OLED screens appear extraordinarily bright because of their unusually high contrast. Unlike LCDs, they have neither backlights nor chemical shutters that must open and close. Instead each pixel illuminates like a light bulb.
Clarity
Clear, distinct images result from OLED displays’ lifelike color reproduction, vibrancy, and brightness. Unlike LCDs, OLED screens dispense with intervening liquid crystal structures that limit color vibrancy off-angle.
While camera-class LCDs can typically reproduce 262,000 colors, OLED displays exhibit more than 16 million colors.
Lifelike motion
OLED pixels turn on and off as fast as any light bulb. Their independent action in an active OLED display – like the KODAK displays – produces fluid full-motion video.
In fact, active displays can refresh at rates more than three times that required for standard video.
Easy to incorporate

Thin OLED screens are free from the added bulk and weight of backlighting, making them ideal for compact devices.

Smaller is better
Easier to see in changing ambient light conditions, OLED displays bring an edge to device ergonomics.
Bright, clear images and a faster pixel refresh rate – easily better than the standard 60 frames per second – mean fewer compromises in device design and use.
OLED displays are more easily viewed than LCDs of comparable size, providing greater utility. You no longer need to position yourself or your device to get a good view.
Standard (familiar) electronic architecture
OLED panels take the same input signals as LCDs. So you can add value to existing product designs and create new ones.
KODAK displays’ straightforward electronic interface makes innovation cost-effective. Kodak’s display controllers provide a simple digital-to-analog interface, supporting streaming video inputs from composite to S-video, VGA and Digital Visual Interface (DVI), as well as custom digital video.
Efficient
In typical image and video applications, OLED displays typically use only 25 percent of their maximum possible power consumption.