Sunday, December 18th 2022
Displace to Launch Truly Wireless TV Powered by AMD and NVIDIA at CES 2023
We don't normally cover TV's at TPU, but this one is so different to anything else out there, that we had to cover it. A US company that goes under the name Displace, will launch the Displace TV at CES 2023 in January and maybe the least strange part of this TV is that it'll have a CPU from AMD and a GPU from NVIDIA, although technically speaking, neither is actually inside the TV itself. The display itself doesn't seem to be particularly remarkable, as it's a 55-inch 4K display based around an unknown OLED panel. However, Displace claims that the sub 20 lbs (9.07 kg) panel features "proprietary active-loop vacuum technology" which allows it to be stuck to any wall without the need of mounting hardware.
If that wasn't crazy enough, the Displace TV is powered by an interchangeable battery pack and the company claims that the TV has a month's worth of battery life, assuming you don't use it more than six hours a day. The company provides four batteries and a charging station with the TV, as well as a base unit, which houses the AMD CPU and NVIDIA GPU. The only other thing the company mentioned about the base station is that it supports Wi-Fi 6E. The Displace TV also supports gesture control, as well as voice control and a remote. For those that find a 55-inch TV a bit on the small side, Displace claims that up to four panels can be connected together to create a 110-inch 16K TV, although it seems like they've counted wrong here, as four times 4K resolution is only 8K, not 16K. It all sounds a bit too good to be true, but we'll have to wait and see if the company really shows up at CES and if it has a product that delivers on all its claims.
Sources:
Displace, via Flat Panels HD
If that wasn't crazy enough, the Displace TV is powered by an interchangeable battery pack and the company claims that the TV has a month's worth of battery life, assuming you don't use it more than six hours a day. The company provides four batteries and a charging station with the TV, as well as a base unit, which houses the AMD CPU and NVIDIA GPU. The only other thing the company mentioned about the base station is that it supports Wi-Fi 6E. The Displace TV also supports gesture control, as well as voice control and a remote. For those that find a 55-inch TV a bit on the small side, Displace claims that up to four panels can be connected together to create a 110-inch 16K TV, although it seems like they've counted wrong here, as four times 4K resolution is only 8K, not 16K. It all sounds a bit too good to be true, but we'll have to wait and see if the company really shows up at CES and if it has a product that delivers on all its claims.
24 Comments on Displace to Launch Truly Wireless TV Powered by AMD and NVIDIA at CES 2023
A product that literally no one asked for or solves an existing problem and creates a hassle for it owners. I'm impressed. That my friends is bs, until I see it in person because in my area textured walls were all the rage since the 2000s until now neo-modernism/minimalism started taking over recently. No amount of vacuum wizardry is going to get a vacuum seal on a wall that's finished in a porous split-faced stone tile, or real wood.
playing russian roulette with an expensive TV? sign me the fuck up!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"The world is ending but your TV still works"
Then there is a basestation/PC/tuner that sends the picture wireless to the Screen, probably uses a powercord.
I've always liked the idea of the base station separate from the display, easier to manage heat, theoretically base station upgradeable and panel can be re-used and vice-versa, easier mounting, clean look
It's funny, but it's fake! Very much fake! Just trying to lure/scam investors into stupid and impossible products...
As for personal use... no thanks, can't be arsed swapping/recharging batteries whether its one month or 6. Everytime the battery bars drop below 49% my short of juice OCD kicks in. A long-lasting battery rechargeable smaller travellers wireless display would be nice... so not discounting personal use completely.
This is just another one of those bullshit products that seem groundbreaking but have no pratical interest that are presented every year at CES.