QD-OLED was what finally got me to upgrade from my old Plasma TV a couple years ago. My only regret was not waiting a few months longer to get the really good sales on the S95B. I’m now buying a QD-OLED monitor for my computer because I like the TV so much.
My space is pretty bright (floor to ceiling west facing windows to the side of my TV) and it is mostly fine, even in the afternoon when I get direct sunlight with only some lighly diffusing blinds. You are better off blocking as much light as possible no matter the TV you have though as dark areas will reflect the surroundings on every glossy TV.
Cephalotrocity@biglemmowski.win 3 months ago
Is it in any way possible to rearrange the room so the window reflection isn’t an issue? In my experience no TV cures reflection issues except maybe projector onto a wall types. This would be my first priority. Opaque blinds otherwise (not the flimsy white plastic type that just diffuse most of the light).
Other than the reflection issue, I think you’d be pretty happy with an OLED. Blows the doors off LCD/LED types.
Grogon@lemmy.world 3 months ago
Well the room is perfectly made for where the sofa is and where the TV will be mounted on (wall).
The window I can completly darken by letting down the electronic shades. I don’t get any sunlight into the living room because of the roof of the terrace but I get a lot of indirect light into the room.
So basically my room can’t be hit by sunlight…
Moment I have a picture
Image
Cephalotrocity@biglemmowski.win 3 months ago
Where is the sofa, because you could wall mount the TV using an arm in the visible corner with a slight tilt so it doesn’t obstruct the small window. That should keep any glare off it from everywhere by the corner to the right (just out of view). An OLED should be well bright enough to easily overpower diffuse indirect light.
Alternatively placing the TV flat against that back wall should allow for decent viewing anywhere to the left of the camera in photo but might get bad diffuse lighting from the door.