While burn-in is inherent to OLED technology, manufacturers can compensate for it through software designed to improve the useable life of your panel. Fortun...
If it’s anything like my experience with Plasma I expect signs of permanent panel degradation during normal use will show up at around 8-10k hours, and mine is mostly cause of subtitles and logos (now at almost 12k). Right now I think they said they are 5k so I’m curious to see how it’s going to go for the next update. I do need to change my TV eventually but probably going to keep it till it dies at this point.
I have a Panasonic ST30 with about 15k hours that saw plenty of PC desktop usage due to having an Htpc connected the entire time I’ve owned it, and I still have no burn in. OLED burn-in is cumulative. Plasma burn-in is completely avoidable.
If it’s anything like my experience with Plasma I expect signs of permanent panel degradation during normal use will show up at around 8-10k hours, and mine is mostly cause of subtitles and logos (now at almost 12k). Right now I think they said they are 5k so I’m curious to see how it’s going to go for the next update. I do need to change my TV eventually but probably going to keep it till it dies at this point.
I have a Panasonic ST30 with about 15k hours that saw plenty of PC desktop usage due to having an Htpc connected the entire time I’ve owned it, and I still have no burn in. OLED burn-in is cumulative. Plasma burn-in is completely avoidable.