Samsung’s the Frame TV: A Box Inspiring Room Makeovers

Samsung’s FRAME TV

TVs were big, bulky, and took excessive space from the living room in the past. Then, flatscreen emerged on the scene with its slim and aesthetic design that just fits right in, as long as you have a wall to mount it on. TVs accentuate the stylish aspect of the room, and a suitable TV can either glamorize the room or deface it from its style. In 2017, Samsung’s the Frame TV was released with the exact features needed to give your house that additional futuristic yet elegant element you never knew was missing.

Samsung’s the Frame TV comes with a thin black border – also available in beige, red, and white. The TV also comes with Samsung’s One Connect box to simplify intertwining the cables into the wall, as one cable needs to be connected to the TV only. This will give it a relatively neat look, as all four HDMI ports and the USB ports are inside the One Connect box.

A Machine with Refined Touch

Samsung’s the Frame TV will help you remodel your living room with just one tap, as when it’s turned off, it displays any art painting of your choosing, adding a unique, might I add, and elevated style with the ability to remodel the wall with one click away.

The South Korean conglomerate’s QLED TV can be mounted on the wall of your living room and easily displayed as an artwork in its art mode. But this is not the only remarkable thing about it, as most buyers are not necessarily purchasing the TV for its aesthetic aspect.

With an impressive brightness level, the TV also solidly holds many highlights, with a 55-inch variant on a 120Hz display. The multinational manufacturer embedded into the TV a 40W speaker in its 55-inch version, and 20W in its smaller ones.

While the TV is hyped and promoted as a beautiful piece of art that can be hung, let’s say, above your chimney, it is still quite pricy, as it currently costs $4,299. Although, it provides an impressive set of features, such as the wall mount features that comes with the TV, leaving no inches between the TV and the wall, making it really appear like an art piece.

Also, the motion sensor completely turns Samsung’s the Frame TV off when no one is in the room. But when it detects any motion in the space, the art display returns to the screen. Another eye-catching feature would have to be the LED Quantum Dot Technology.

LED Quantum Dot Technology is a new type of LED-backlit LCD that makes tiny phosphorescent crystals react to light and electricity. This means that when images are displayed on the screen during art mode, they do not burn into the screen, portraying a realistic and sharp image.


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