What it does not show is the large box of electronics or the proprietary cable hidden from view.
Seen this thing in the flesh and its fragility as well as requiring well trained installers means it is a very niche product.
It still needs a slim bracket fastened to the wall that then adheres the display by magnets.
I was nearly scared to death handling the thing; chance of fracture is very high. Not for the fainthearted, and the picture was still crappy sample and hold with judder.
OLED is overrated and the blue failure after significant hours of use is still a problem.
Response time is worse than LCD when using HDR (so many competing formats) and unless you are willing to invest in a UHD Blu-Ray player, all you are getting is adaptive steaming crap.
Marketing people need to convince the GP to buy that the spanking new TV to watch content made twenty years ago. Broadcast TV is moribund, and streaming services suck unless you are fortunate to have fibre to the home.
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