BOE VIP Room Tour at Display Week 2026: 3D, OLED, RGBW, Automotive, Sensor Displays

Posted by – May 16, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

BOE’s VIP room tour shows how broad the company’s display portfolio has become, from high-performance stereoscopic 3D to ultra-thin mobile PC concepts, smart home interfaces, small OLED modules, flexible AMOLED, automotive displays, aviation panels, medical screens, and pressure sensor integration. The focus is not one single panel type, but the way BOE combines LCD, OLED, RGBW, in-cell touch, sensor layers, and AI-driven interaction into complete product concepts. https://www.boe.com/en/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

The 3D section highlights both glasses-based 3D with very low crosstalk and glasses-free 3D with eye tracking, where the display follows one viewer to preserve depth and reduce blur. The tour also looks at narrow-border consumer panels, an ultra-light laptop display concept around 475 grams, and 5K high-refresh low-motion-blur LCD technology using modes around 120Hz and 144Hz for cleaner fast-moving image detail.

Several smaller embedded displays show where screens are moving beyond phones, TVs, and laptops. BOE demonstrates touch displays for smart door systems, square and round panels for home appliances, a 0.88-inch OLED for compact electronics, flexible LED/OLED surfaces for expressive robot faces, and monochrome LCD/OLED light engines for 3D printing. The 55-inch curved 4K RGBW panel is used to explain the power-consumption trade-off: RGBW can reduce power draw by about 20%, while RGB panels can preserve stronger color saturation and image depth.

Filmed at Display Week 2026 in Los Angeles, the tour also moves into harsh-environment and professional display use cases. A diving watch uses a 3.26-inch AMOLED display that can still operate under water pressure, while other examples include fish-finder screens, digital side-mirror replacement for vehicles, camera-under-display integration, ultra-black LCD comparison panels, and a rear-seat automotive cinema display that physically adjusts to the passenger’s eye level. BOE’s Ultra Black Cell and UB Cell-style LCD work is especially relevant here, because automotive and premium LCD applications need high contrast, strong daylight readability, and low power draw without relying only on OLED.

The final section shows displays built for reliability rather than thinness: aviation panels with rugged construction and high contrast, surgical displays for medical imaging, pressure-sensor arrays, and a smartwatch-style blood-pressure measurement module that uses a tiny sensor system at the wrist. Overall, the BOE VIP room presents a display ecosystem built around OLED, LCD, oxide, LTPS, RGBW, in-cell touch, flexible form factors, automotive integration, medical imaging, and sensor fusion, showing how display technology is becoming both visual interface and measurement surface.

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTsHUuA4yKc