Henry Ellsworth, former Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office, delivered his annual report to congress in 1843. "The advancement of the arts, from year to year, taxes our credulity and seems to presage the arrival of that period when human improvement must end."
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
In the previous year, a record 490 patents had been approved. It is hard to say when human improvement will end but in 2019, 311,000 patents were approved by that same office.
One of the greatest challenges for developers is in a mature market.
How do you continue to innovate and attract clients to the upgrade market when all possible innovation has seemingly occurred?
From 30 June 1925 when Charles Jenkins was granted U.S. patent 1,544,156 for 'Transmitting Pictures over Wireless' to CRT and the flat-panel revolution of Plasma then LCD; LED; TFT and OLED, there is no doubt that the technology in televisions has progressed to the point when some question the ability to innovate further.
With the number of worldwide connected television sets predicted to pass the one billion mark next year, market leading companies such as Samsung; LG; Sony and Hisense are literally banking on innovation to keep driving sales.
So where are we headed?
4K resolutions (named for the number of pixels across the screen - 3,840 pixels wide by 2,160 pixels high for a total of 8.3 million individual pixels) would seem like the latest resolution but with 35 per cent of televisions sales last year at 4K the new battleground is already shaping up with 8K - a massive 33 million pixels on the screen.
Someone forgot to tell the manufacturers that only a few Australian channels are even broadcasting in 4K yet as they try and convince you that 8K is the only option to even consider.
Remember when plasma TVs hit 42" and we thought that was a huge size for a TV? Before long, 42" became the standard fare for your new TV but that size is almost up to 65" now.
In 2020 it is expected that 65" screens will make up 24 per cent of all sales. Bezels as small as 2.3mm make it even easier to fit the large screens in the same space - which brings me to my next point.
There was a time when you wanted your screen to stand out as a centrepiece of your living room.
Manufacturers are betting that the opposite now applies. Screens that are 20mm thick to sit flush on your wall will be the basic choice. Televisions are starting to roll-up when not being used or, my favourite option, televisions that appear to be a piece of art hanging on the wall until a voice command springs them into life for your favourite viewing.
When will innovation end? I hope never. Tell me what you want in a TV at ask@techtalk.digital.