Sony has unveiled the Bravia 9 II television, a bet that promises to change the rules of the game in LED lighting. Its True RGB technology, based on a MiniLED system with red, green, and blue subpixels in each diode, allows individual control of light and color. This brings chromatic precision closer to what is seen on post-production monitors, without filters or tricks.
True RGB: when each diode paints its own wall 🎨
Unlike conventional MiniLED, which uses white or blue diodes and then filters the light, True RGB illuminates with pure colors from the source. Each subpixel is an independent source, avoiding loss of saturation when increasing brightness. The result is intense colors without white turning blue or red looking orange. The Bravia 7 II also incorporates this technology, democratizing an advancement that until now was only seen in prototypes or laboratories.
The TV that doesn't need you to explain what red is 😅
Sony has decided that manufacturers should stop guessing colors with white flashlights. While other brands use fuzzy logic to simulate a decent green, the Bravia 9 II directly turns on a green LED and that's it. It's as if your neighbor suddenly stopped painting his car with a roller and started using an airbrush. Now we just need the price not to be so astronomical that you have to sell a kidney to see a pure blue. Technology advances, but the wallet weeps.