Welcome to the rise of display glass.
For fifty years, scientists have advanced the potential of glass, making possible technologies like LCD televisions, then monitors, laptops, and tablets. OLED phones and wearables followed, all dependent on this rise of display glass.
Today, the world watches as we experience the next rise. The industry is shifting once again, looking to technologies like QD OLED, MiniLED, and MicroLED to deliver more lifelike, beautiful, and useful displays. And that’s only the beginning.
A television foundation
Some of us remember early console televisions that were a piece of furniture in a home. Today, TVs are still a statement piece, but in such a different way. The look may have changed drastically, but the impact remains.
Through the COVID-19 pandemic, television has been a window to the world we missed, a critical source of lifesaving information, even a welcome helper to ignite the imaginations of restless children while we work from our dinner tables. Whether in the 1960s or the 2020s, we gather around a TV to share an experience – laughing at a sitcom, watching in awe as history is made, or observing a part of the world where you’ve never set foot in person. Displays connect us and power some of our most meaningful interactions.