惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
博客园 - 【当耐特】
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
爱范儿
爱范儿
The Cloudflare Blog
腾讯CDC
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
C
Check Point Blog
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
S
Schneier on Security
J
Java Code Geeks
B
Blog RSS Feed
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Vercel News
Vercel News
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
博客园_首页
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
A
About on SuperTechFans
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
罗磊的独立博客
A
Arctic Wolf
S
Secure Thoughts
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
量子位
U
Unit 42
I
InfoQ
D
DataBreaches.Net
P
Privacy International News Feed
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
博客园 - 叶小钗
T
Threatpost
博客园 - Franky
K
Kaspersky official blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
IT之家
IT之家
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
C
Cisco Blogs

Technology - Popular Mechanics

I Swapped My Skateboard for an Electric Scooter, and I'm Never Looking Back Tight Schedule? These Battery Packs Keep Your Phone, Tablet, and Laptop Charged All Day I Found Toys at the Beach and Change at the Park, Testing These Expert-Approved Metal Detectors Early Prime Day Apple Deals Are Now Live on Amazon—Here’s What Shoppers Should Add to Cart ASAP These Editor-Recommended Radar Detectors Are the Ticket to More Informed Driving Inside One of America’s Worst Highway Collapses—and the Crazy Idea That Reopened I-95 in 12 Staggering Days Dolby Vision 2 Is Here, but It’s Not a Must-Have Feature Yet The Coolest Tech Gifts of the Year Are Here. These Gadgets Will Blow Gearheads Away. Feel Nagging Wrist Pain When You Type? It’s Time to Switch to an Ergonomic Keyboard. Ready to Upgrade Your Phone? These are the iPhones and Androids We Recommend Right Now EcoFlow’s Power Stations Are Heavily Discounted For Memorial Day—Get Nearly 60% Off Best-Selling Models Jackery Power Stations Are Up to 53% Off for Memorial Day, Including Editor-Tested Backup Picks I’ve Been Testing Ergonomic Keyboards for Months. This Is How I Got Comfortable Without Slowing Down. Save Nearly 50% on Samsung, Roku, TCL, and Hisense TVs for Memorial Day Weekend Qi2.2 Wireless Charging Is Coming to Phones and Battery Packs Everywhere… What Does It Do, Anyway? The Best TVs of 2026, Tested by Popular Mechanics These 4K TVs Make Your Shows, Movies, and Games Look Incredible Marshall’s Hendrix-Inspired Acton III Speaker Is Built for Rock Fans Tired of Pool Cleaning Eating Up Your Weekend? These Robots Can Do It For You Client Challenge The Motorola Razr Fold Does What Other Folding Phones Don’t A Runaway Train With Toxic Cargo Was Barreling Toward Disaster. Then, Two Men Had a Crazy Idea to Catch It. There’s a New Best Bang-for-Your-Buck Flashlight—and It’s a Collab With Jeep The SunBrite Veranda 4 Trades QLED Brightness for RGB Color New to Vinyl? This ‘Basic’ Record Player is the Perfect Place to Start Mophie Powerstation Mini 5K Review: This Tiny Battery Pack is Small Enough to Fit into Any EDC Kit Our Expert Says the Minelab Vanquish 440 Is the Best Metal Detector for Most People. Here’s Why. Apple iPhone 17 Pro Long-Term Review: After 9 Months, I’m Still Sure It’s the Best Phone You Can Buy The Schlage Arrive Electronic Deadbolt Proves That Smart Tech Doesn’t Need to Be Complicated The Netgear RS200 Nighthawk Is a Great Router for WiFi-Hungry Households Klaris Clear Ice Maker Review: Slow-Melting Cubes for Cocktails, If You Get the Timing Right The 6 Best Drones for Filmmaking and Flying, Whether You're a Beginner or a Pro The Hisense UR9 Kicks Off The RGB TV Tech Race and a Quest For the Brightest, Most Accurate Color Our Editors Rounded Up Their Go-To Watches To Wear In and Out of the Office The Best Nintendo Switch 2 Cases to Keep Your Console Safe Gaming on a Mac Is Better Than Ever—With One Big Catch I Have 6 Pets, and This Is the Only Pet Hair Vacuum I’d Recommend for Anyone Hoverair X1 Promax Drone Review: A Hobby-Grade Camera Drone For Beginners and Experts Alike Dreame H15 Pro Heat vs. G10 Pro: The Ultimate Wet-Dry Vacuum Showdown Photoelectric vs. Ionization Smoke Detectors: What Are the Differences, and Which Kind Should You Buy? Amazon Is Ending Support for Older Kindles: How to Tell If Yours Is Affected and What Your Options Are Scientists Just Created an Artificial Brain Cell That Can Talk to Real Brains Worx WG163 Cordless PowerShare String Trimmer Review: A Clever Combo That Gets Your Trimming and Edging Done Minus Fatigue or Frustration The Sharge Icemag 3 Magnetic Battery Pack Stands Out with Cool and Handy Features The Amazon Ember Artline Gives Frame TV Shoppers Lots of Options The Sylvox Frameless Pro is a Sleek Outdoor TV You’ll Want to Show Off We Squinted, Stared, Streamed, and Gamed to Find the Best OLED TVs for Your Living Room This Is Probably the Last New Major DJI Drone the U.S. Will See for a While The Coway Airmega Mighty2 Feels Like a ‘Full Service’ Air Purifier The Best Gaming Desktops For Every Spec and Budget The TCL QM8L SQD Mini-LED TV Brings More Color and Brightness to Last Year’s Top TV Counterfeit SSDs Are Getting Harder to Spot: Here’s How to Make Sure You Aren’t Getting a Fake Despite the Government’s Ban, Netgear Just Got an Exemption to Keep Selling New WiFi Routers in the U.S. Husqvarna’s 320iHD60 Hedge Trimmer Helps You Groom Your Hedges in Record Time The 6-GHz WiFi Band Is Ultra-Fast. But It’s Probably Not Worth Splurging for Unless You Have This One Need. No, You Don’t Need to Put a Screen Protector on Your Phone The Gooloo GT6000 Tested: Rapid Recharging, Reliability, and Safety Make It A Must-Have for Vehicle Owners Uniden R7 Radar Detector: Why Our Favorite Model Delivers the Best Protection for the Price Anker Nano Power Bank vs. Belkin Portable Charger: Which Battery Pack Is More Worth It? TP-Link’s Archer BE3600 Router Is a Fast, Affordable Entry Into Wi-Fi 7 How to Use an External Hard Drive to Store PS5 Games The Quantum Encryption Apocalypse Is Closer Than You Think, Scientists Say Which Turntable Mat is Best for Your Record Player? We Have the Answers. Why Anker’s Zolo Power Bank Is Perfect for Value-Seeking Gearheads Here’s How to Encrypt Your Whole External Backup Drive to Keep Your Files Safe These Retro-Inspired Apple Accessories Bring Back Early-2000s Style This Gigantic ‘Hot’ Battery Could Transform America’s Coal Plants, Scientists Say The Apple AirPods Max 2 Does a Lot of Things a Little Bit Better The 6 Best HDTV Antennas, According To a Broadcasting Expert Our Resident Apple Expert Swears By These iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max Cases The 6 Best Budget Projectors for Your Home Theater Can You Replace a UPS Backup with a Portable Power Station? Save $100 on the Latest Apple Watch During Amazon’s Big Spring Sale A New Government Ruling Bans Foreign-Made WiFi Routers—But Your Current Setup Is Probably Safe I Had a Rocky Relationship With the PlayStation Portal, but I Learned to Love It Samsung Calls the B-Series Soundbar Great for Beginners—But There’s a Catch The Anker Nano Powerbank: Why It’s Worthy of a Spot in Your Gear Bag With Bose’s QuietComfort Wireless Headphones, I Can Tune Out the World—or Let It In Just Enough I Bought This Switch 2 Carrying Case Last Year, and My Console Is Still in Excellent Condition This Awesome Gaming Headset Costs More Than a PS5. Is It Worth the Investment? All of the Water Bottles in My Fridge, Ranked The Soundcore Motion 300 Delivers Excellent Bass in One Tiny, Affordable Package Why Everybody Needs to Know About Goodr Sunglasses The Logitech Alto Keys K98M is a Wireless Mechanical Keyboard that I Actually Feel Good About Using at the Office The Best E-Readers of 2026 for Every Type of Reader This Inexpensive Lighting Kit Turned Out to Be the Upgrade My Home Theater Was Missing Nothing Phone (4a) Pro: The Best $500 Phone for Android Enthusiasts How the Criterion Collection Is Keeping Physical Media Alive Don’t Let Wireless CarPlay Incompatibility Get You Down. I Found a Simple (and Cheap) Workaround. If You Love Your Headphones, Hang Them Up. Please. A Study Proves Stoplights Need a Fourth Color: White I Don't Leave the House Without This $18 Portable Charger The BioLite Charge 100 Max Is a Powerful Battery Pack for Anyone Who Works Their Gear Hard Apple MacBook Neo: The Affordable MacBook You’ve Been Waiting for Is Here The Best Smart Glasses To Experience the Future Now Is the Nintendo Switch 2 Worth It? We Broke Down Everything to Consider. Open-Ear vs. Bone Conduction Headphones: Which Delivers Better Sound? The 6 Best Electric Scooters for Kids That Offer Safety and Speed Digitize Your Favorite Pics With These Expert-Recommended Photo Scanners These 3D Printers Can Make Any Digital Design a Plastic Reality
The Samsung S95H OLED TV Is Perfect in (Almost) Every Way
Stefan Vazharov · 2026-06-26 · via Technology - Popular Mechanics

After years of resisting OLED display technology, Samsung’s S95 Series OLED TVs have rapidly risen to become among the most consistently excellent TVs you can hope to look at. Since releasing the original S95B in 2022, every revision has honed the S95 into a high-end spectacle for TV connoisseurs.

This year’s model, the S95H, does not disappoint. It features a sleeker design and a host of welcome improvements, including a brighter screen and more futureproof connectivity, all without a major price jump. Even without succumbing to the rising tide of tech prices this year, it is still a pricey option, starting at $2,500 for a 55-inch set, but worth splurging on if you want the absolute best picture quality anytime, in any space.

S95H 4K OLED TV

Pros

  • Sleek design
  • Bright for an OLED
  • Great gaming features (high refresh rate, VRR support)
  • Rich set of connectivity features
  • Sleek and intuitive remote

Cons

  • No Dolby Vision support

Key Specs

Display TypeQD-OLED
Refresh Rate165Hz
HDRHDR10+ Advanced, HDR10, HLG
ConnectivityFour HDMI 2.1 ports, Wi-Fi 6E
OSSamsung Tizen
SoundDolby Atmos

Bringing Big Brightness

Samsung builds on the already tremendous image quality of its OLED series, which has historically offered sharpness and color depth on par with elite displays like LG’s G-series and Sony Bravia OLEDs, by amping up the S95H’s brightness. Between its peak luminosity that approaches 3,000 nits and Samsung’s anti-glare tech, which has impressed me for years now, you can see this TV in just about any kind of lighting. With OLED displays, especially, which have a reputation for tremendous sharpness and contrast at the expense of bright backlighting, this is a huge upgrade and makes the 2026 model worth the extra spend over last year’s S95F.

4K Samsung Vision AI Smart TV with colorful abstract shapes on screen, standing on a modern wooden stand against a brick wall.

Winston Zhou

Brightness, often a weakness in OLED TVs, is the S95H’s biggest strength.

Brightness aside, though, it needs to be said: This TV looks incredible. Its bright quantum-dot OLED panel consistently treated me to stunning visuals, whether I was watching the Netherlands beat Sweden in the opening round of the World Cup, streaming 4K HDR movies from Netflix or HBO Max, or playing Forza Horizon 6 on my Xbox Series X. The on-screen action was beautifully presented with captivating colors, incredible clarity, and zero stutter.

The S95H also features an AI-powered chip that enhances processing and upscales lower-resolution footage to 4K. Of course, the visual enhancements include gaming and cinema modes, as well as other options for optimizing the TV for different types of content. More often than not, though, you’ll see it when watching streaming content in 1080p or lower: the TV upscales the content to 4K, improving sharpness and enhancing detail. Samsung has been a leader in this critical area for some time, and the S95H is predictably one of the best in the business.

Supremely Elegant Design

The outstanding picture quality of the S95H is complemented by the TV’s stunningly elegant hardware design. It features a sleek, polished metal bezel that looks bold when the TV’s off, but isn’t intrusive when you’re watching a show or a movie. In a world where most TV makers (and tech brands in general) want to minimize bezels as much as possible, it’s a gamble to use such a noticeable design, but it works here. The S95F looks like a home decor centerpiece, especially if put in a Frame-TV-style art mode between screenings.

Other Bits I Like

The Samsung S95H is also, unsurprisingly, a gaming powerhouse, ticking every box on a discerning player's list. Capable of up to a 165-Hz frame rate with variable refresh rate support, it can keep up with game consoles and even high-powered gaming PCs. For PC players specifically, it is compatible with both AMD FreeSync and Nvidia G-Sync, which is a nice, if niche, bonus. Samsung’s gaming hub also makes it easy to engage with cloud-based game streaming services like Xbox Game Pass, so all you need is a wireless Xbox controller to get started.

Speaking of which, Samsung’s Tizen TV operating system is also impressive. Its One UI interface is easy to navigate, even for less tech-savvy users. Additionally, the TV will get seven years of timely updates, much like Samsung’s Galaxy phones.

Hand holding a Samsung remote control in front of a large television displaying abstract art.

Winston Zhou

The SolarCell remote is sleek, easy to use, and doesn’t require batteries.

Finally, it’s a fairly minor callout, but I’m a big fan of Samsung’s SolarCell remote, which comes with its OLED TVs. It features an intuitive design, with easily discernible volume and channel buttons. And, since it's light-powered, you never need to replace its batteries. Ever.

The Only Thing I Don’t Like

I always have a bone to pick with Samsung over its TVs’ lack of Dolby Vision high-dynamic range support. While its enhanced HDR10+ is immersive, sophisticated, and available as an open-source option, Dolby Vision is more frequently referenced by movie buffs. This is a very obvious, if minor, nitpick, but I think that paying thousands of dollars for a TV should guarantee you all the bells and whistles possible, including HDR support. Samsung’s rivals offer both options.

Who Should Buy the Samsung S95H?

The Samsung S95H is an incredible TV. You get a best-of-both-worlds screen that delivers OLED sharpness and “perfect” blacks, as always, and the kind of brightness that supports dynamic viewing in all sorts of lighting and viewing conditions. It’s also a stately piece of furniture that looks good in a well-appointed living room, and that means something.

Of course, that kind of quality doesn’t come cheap. The S95H starts at $2,500 for a 55-inch set and goes up to $6,500 for an 83-inch big-screen. Given the rise in tech component prices in 2026, this is just north of the standard for a high-end OLED, but that doesn’t make it any easier to swallow. Still, this is a TV worth investing in. If you want an OLED built to last, this is what I’d buy right now.

If the price is a bridge too far, though, Samsung also makes a slightly lower-performance model, the S90H, which features a lower peak brightness and a more conventional design. It’s a little less perfect, but it’s still very impressive.

Shop Samsung S95H by Size

S95H 4K OLED TV (55-inch)

Samsung S95H 4K OLED TV (55-inch)

S95H 4K OLED TV (65-inch)

Samsung S95H 4K OLED TV (65-inch)

S95H 4K OLED TV (77-inch)

Samsung S95H 4K OLED TV (77-inch)

Samsung S95H 4K OLED TV (83-Inch)

Samsung S95H 4K OLED TV (83-Inch)

Headshot of Stefan Vazharov

Stefan is an award-winning consumer technology editor with over a decade of experience in reviewing gadgets, particularly smartphones, tablets, smartwatches, desktop and laptop computers across multiple form factors and platforms, as well as accessories for them. He also covers televisions and audio equipment, including headphones, earbuds, wireless speakers, and soundbars. Since joining Hearst in 2015, Stefan has contributed to BestProducts, Popular Mechanics, and numerous other publications. Prior to his current role, he served as the US Editor for GSMArena.com.

Headshot of Mike Epstein

Mike Epstein is a Senior Commerce Editor at Hearst Enthusiast Group, producing reviews for buying guides Popular Mechanics, Runner’s World, Bicycling, and Best Products. Prior to joining Hearst, he was a video game and technology critic for over 10 years, with bylines at IGN, Gamespot, Variety, Lifehacker, Kotaku, GamesRadar, Flavorwire and Digital Trends, among others. Now, he’s a jack of all trades, helping reviewers share everything they know about all kinds of technical gear, from snowblowers, to running shoes and bicycles, and every kind of gadget imaginable.