Over the past two years, Samsung has shown its futuristic, modular TV called The Wall, which uses Microlet technology (and sold to some of the richest). Without the many flaws associated with it – Microlet shares many of the best features of OLED, and is widely regarded as the next big upgrade leap for scenes in our lives. Now, Samsung is taking the Microlet and turning it into a more traditional TV format factor. Today the company announced the 110-inch Microlet TV, which is booked in Korea today, and will make its global debut in the first quarter of 2021. Remembering the first question, no, Samsung has not yet revealed the price of this massive TV using the latest image technology. But you can expect it to cost a lot more than the company’s other 4K (or 8K) sets because of the self-emitting microlet magic. You will not really notice any bezels or borders in these pictures; This TV has a screen-to-body ratio of 99.99 percent, but Samsung is still able to build on an “embedded majestic sound system” that claims to “deliver breathtaking 5.1 channel sound without an external speaker”. Image: Samsung What Samsung Says About Image Quality: It uses 110-inch microlet micrometer-sized LED lights that remove backlight and color filters used in conventional displays. Instead, it is self-luminous – creating light and color from its own pixel structures. It emits 100% of the DCI and Adobe RGP color range, and delivers accurate color range images taken with high-end DSLR cameras. It offers stunning, lifetime colors and 4K resolution of the display and accurate brightness from 8 million pixels. Since all of those LEDs are self-luminous, you will get the perfect blacks and amazing contrast that came with defining the OLED. But most importantly, the micronutrient is mineral-free, so it should have excellent longevity. Modern OLED TVs should not have the burning threat that is already becoming rare. Samsung estimates a lifespan of about 100,000 hours – or “up to a decade.” According to The Wall, those microlights are housed in modular panels that can be combined to create a TV of any size – if you have paid for it. Here is an example of The Wall installed in a luxury London home. But the 110-inch TV is the most traditional form factor. I asked Samsung if the 110-inch Microlet includes HDMI 2.1 and if it supports everything possible (like 120Hz 4K gaming). But the answer was not available at the time of the press. The ability to view four sources simultaneously (even from different HDMI inputs) with the TV’s Multi View feature is a neat software trick. Samsung says it is not possible to produce a 110-inch Microlet TV until the latest innovations, and the company claims that a “new manufacturing process derived from its semiconductor business” makes it possible. Small Microlet TVs are already on the road map, so while this thing is sure to keep the price out of reach for many, one-day costs will be unrestricted models. However, this is still one way, Samsung expects a new virtual (yet beautiful) consumer QLED 4K and 8K TVs next month during a virtual CES 2021.