Over the course of these private conversations, the participating teenagers revealed, through the narratives they told, their dispositions of mind: their inclinations to engage reflectively with issues and ideas, their tendencies to be curious and compassionate, and their proclivities to use what they learn to inform their emerging values. The conversations with teenagers revolved around important matters like how they choose their friends, think about their parents, and understand their ethnic identity how they see their current schooling as contributing to their future what academic subjects they enjoy most and why why gang violence exists in their neighborhood and what could improve the situation and how they feel when learning about true stories the researchers shared of teens from around the world (for instance, the story of Malala Yousafzai as a young teen in Pakistan). Regardless of the connection and source, the perfect black level ensures superlative contrast.At first pass, this may seem like sci-fi or developmental determinism, but in fact it is the opposite of deterministic. However, our 4K-capable signal generator using a similar test pattern got the screen to reach a far better 292.01 cd/m 2, closer to a fully lit LED LCD HDTV. With a flat white screen provided over a computer connection at 1080p, the screen produced a disappointing 82.78 cd/m 2 peak brightness, similar to plasma HDTV with its screen completely lit and slightly dimmer than the 55EC9300. After a basic dark room calibration, the screen showed absolutely no luminance with a contrast tunnel test pattern, producing a perfect black that only OLED displays have so far been able to produce. We test HDTVs with a Klein K-10A colorimeter, DVDO AVLab test pattern generator, SpectraCal's CalMAN 5 software, and DisplayMate test patterns. PerformanceThe last two OLED HDTVs we tested showed perfectly dark black levels for the often-claimed, nearly mythical "infinite" contrast ratio. This mode separates split-screen views into two separate pictures using the screen's 3D filter, so one player can see one picture while the other can see a different picture. The HDTV also supports a Dual Play mode with the use of optional Dual Play gaming glasses ($19.99 for two pairs). Because the glasses use filters and not shutters, they're inexpensive (additional pairs can be purchased at $29.99 for a four-pack) and don't require batteries. Like the previous LG curved OLED HDTVs, the 65EC9700 supports passive 3D, and includes four pairs of glasses. The HDTV supports media playback from USB or networked storage, and supports wireless display mirroring with WiDi and Miracast. There's also live television integration, either through a direct cable or antenna connection or with a set-top box if you use a set-top box, the screen can automatically control it with a built-in IR blaster. ![]() WebOS supports all of the common streaming video services like Netflix, Hulu Plus, Amazon Instant Video, YouTube, and Vudu out of the box, and the LG Store offers dozens of additional free and pay apps, games, and on-demand video. ![]() ![]() A microphone built into the top of the remote lets you control the HDTV with voice commands.įeaturesLG's webOS interface is unchanged from last year, with the same menu design and features as the 55EC9300 and other connected LG televisions. Four color buttons and Volume Up/Down, Channel Up/Down, Input, 3D, and Mute controls sit below it. The pad is flanked by Power, Back, Home, TV, and Voice buttons. It also has a conventional direction pad that sits directly under the thumb, with a scroll wheel in the center that doubles as an OK button. The remote functions like an air mouse, controlling an on-screen pointer by waving it in different directions. It's a curved controller that fits comfortably in the hand, and looks vaguely like a glossy black egg. ![]() The included Magic Remote is nearly identical to the motion-sensing remotes included in LG's other webOS-powered HDTVs.
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