Have you ever wanted a really big screen?
Have you ever wanted a movie theater, like experience in close quarters? Have you ever said to yourself, I want the biggest TV, no matter what That often means, you're stuck with a projector? Maybe you don't have the right environment to set those up or regular LCD-led OLED seems to cap out at the moment at like 88 inches. I have a very beautiful Owlette display. Actually. This is the one right here. You can see the price tag is terrifying. $29,996.
Some people are going to want a solution. That's a little bit more affordable but still wants scale. And that's only 88 inches only. Now Samsung is releasing this display over here, 98 inches. It's on pre-order and that's a UHD smart Q-led TV. And that's 15 grand. You probably don't want to pay that either today. I'll present you with an alternative option and it's a technology that I have not personally experienced before its product from high sense. And it is a laser TV, which is essentially like a short-throw projector that sits very close to the wall, but it comes with a really interesting display and it's going to be a lot less money than those other technologies. All right, then we'll get right to it. Then meet the L nine G try chroma, laser TV inspired by a world of incredible color, a true feast for your eyes at a scale that makes everything feel brand new.
Okay. So everything is set up in here. And if you take a glance this way, you will see the 100-inch massive display. So this might be the cheapest path towards a 100 inch TV. The L nine G uses pure red, green, blue lasers to achieve new levels of color performance, 107% of the BT 2020 color space, 3000 lumens of brightness. It's HDR, 10 capable, and it's 4k at 60 Hertz. Oh, and by the way, if you need more than 100 inches, it's also available in one 20 inches. Ferion is the key here. And this is the thing I was mentioning earlier. Reflections. It's bizarre almost. We have these lights on the ceiling in here, and they're not reflecting off the display at all. Now, as far as this ALR screen is concerned, they sell two models. There's daylight and a cinema screen.
And as you can see, they have different attributes. The daylight screen is best in bright and airy rooms with lots of space and lots of light and produces a beaming bright picture. The cinema screen is more for a darker environment, a cinema-like environment, beautiful colors, over wide viewing angles, flat pack, design screen assemblies required, but the payoff is worth it. Oh, it's also running Android TV. It's got everything you need to get up and running in one box. So this is what the unit looks like. That's going to be projecting up onto this screen. 4k smart laser television, DLP, Android TV, Dolby, Atmos. Remember it has sound built into it. 4k HDR, HD might as well. So over here we have digital audio out. There's a bunch of HDMI ports, uh, actually 4k one 20 Hertz supported on two of those ports, 4k 60 Hertz on one of them.
You also have a USB port in analog audio out. Wow. And there's even an internet slash cable connection. This is your projection surface here in the front speaker grill on the front laser TV. Let's turn it on. Remote is a typical Android TV, smart TV type of setup. You have your assistant button dedicated to the top. You have some shortcuts for YouTube, Google plays Disney plus prime video. There's a dedicated media button and I've never watched Tubi before volume channel change, input selector, relatively predictable stuff. I'm going to go ahead and turn the unit on right now. And just like that, this is surprising with the lights on. This is my first time viewing this display. And it is not your typical projector experience.
I can feel the heat as well. The sound that we're hearing right now is from the high sense of unity. It is not from those external speakers. Those are just there for looks for the moment. Since we're not evaluating those, DBLs, you know how those things relate. So it does mimic just having an enormous TV. Listen, this is going to be compromised. As I look at old led screens and the black is super dark and it's like this saturated look, but there's something about this as well with the lack of reflectiveness, which is appealing, it's such a map viewing experience. So there's a, there's very little distraction, ambient light distraction going on. It's pleasing and easy to look at.
Electric cars have existed that were out there to me. That's changed. And you see this thing sitting right here. It's kind of my dream specification of what to me was the most exciting emotional electric that has come out this right here is one of those that trying to get to this it's very fast. There is something about positions at any moment when I'm watching that video. I didn't think, oh, I wish I was looking at a regular TV. I was just sitting there thinking this is a huge immersive visual. That's it? That's all I was thinking, sitting in front, sitting this distance from a hundred inches. That's the only thing that crossed my mind. And the other surprising thing was the vibrancy of color. I didn't expect the red seats in that, uh, Tycon video to pop that much. It's not what I'm used to in a lit environment with a projector. So now I'm starting to understand the marketing around laser TV instead of a laser projector, because of the experience, especially with this screen and a projector, Like I can appreciate it more. I just scale. It was carving is somehow as well. There's not a lack of detail, like stuff getting lost in the dark or bright sections. You can see all the detail. It's a very balanced kind of lighting. Like it's not overly contrasted or boosted to the extent that you feel like you're losing information or hit the lights.
Oh, reflection. Are you seeing that? Okay. So the flashlight is on the phone. They, I can probably even go close. Oh, barely a shimmer on there in the black areas. Exclusively. That will be a big ugly. When you're trying to watch a movie, I don't know. You probably can't even see me right now. I have many displays in my house in auto, be a light somewhere in the kitchen or something. You're trying to watch a movie. I'd have you see the light fixture in great detail on a glossy surface. This is like the matte finish TV. It's not a TV. Like, you know it, it's not trying to be. It has its own set of attributes and uniqueness to it. This is going to be interesting to people who want scale. They want to start with scale and go from there. They're like, I want a hundred inches and I don't want to spend $25,000 or $15,000 or whatever.
Typical TV technology would demand a display of this size. Oh, it's got an Android TV so you can install anything you want on it. YouTube prime video, Google play movies, and whatnot. It's a little bit surprising to me. My mind was thinking more projector as far as how the visuals going to look, but that's not the case cause I've never seen a projector be powerful enough in a lit room to mimic the TV experience. This one is the closest that I have seen. So if you want a hundred inches, but you want to pay less than laser TV tech is something to look at.