Anicet Mbida 6:53 am, December 16, 2021

Every day, Anicet Mbida makes us discover an innovation that could well change the way we consume.

This Thursday, he is interested in the television of the future.

According to him, they should be tactile and even transportable.

Tomorrow's television trends are starting to take shape.

And surprise, future models should be tactile and even transportable.

After ever larger, ever thinner, ever more HD screens… manufacturers are now trying to copy tablets.

We are talking about a transportable TV, not portable.

So you have to imagine a giant tablet, on a wheeled base to be able to take it everywhere.

The screen swivels in all directions to orient it as you wish, whether you are lying in bed, sprawling in an armchair or standing in the kitchen.

There is also a battery.

It is therefore not necessary to plug it in, which further adds to the mobility.

Finally, you said it, the screen is touch-sensitive, detachable.

It can therefore be used without a remote control, on the knees, like a large tablet.

Is there really any point in having a TV on wheels?

The objective: to compete with the tablets.

Today many are used exclusively as mini TVs for watching series or movies anywhere in the house.

Except that a tablet remains a computer, you have to install apps and update them.

Whereas on a TV, everything is instantaneous.

With a much larger screen (27 inches, in this case. Double that of the largest tablets on the market).

It is LG who has just presented this UFO.

In principle, the big news in terms of TV rather arrive at the beginning of January at CES (the largest electronics fair).

But this year, most of the trendsetters are ahead.

We already know what will be the other trends at CES?

On the television side, we try to blend them into the decor by making them look like furniture.

It started with Samsung and its The Frame models that look like paintings.

It is now joined by Sony and LG who offer sliding panels that hide the screen when not in use.

Objective: no longer have a huge black rectangle that swears in the middle of its decoration.

And offer, instead, a beautiful object that we will be proud to exhibit.

The big comeback of the TV hidden in the cupboard.