In the age of OLED TVs and HD displays, movies should be looking better than ever when we watch them at home. And yet, the opposite seems to be true. If you throw on ...
If you’re unaware of the controversial nature of motion smoothing (a feature found on nearly every modern TV), then two things are likely true: The first is that you probably have motion smoothing ...
According to film buffs and movie directors, motion smoothing is the worst. Even streaming services don't like it. When "Roma" was released on Netflix, the company urged viewers to turn off motion ...
Nvidia’s long-awaited G-Sync Pulsar promises motion as smooth as what you'd get from a 1,000Hz display—if one existed! It's debuting in a few gaming monitors at CES 2026, but does the tech actually ...
As Shakespeare might have put it (but probably didn’t): Motion smoothing is known by many names, yet it’s just as much of a scourge no matter what you call it. The technology, which rose to prominence ...
TL;DR: NVIDIA's Smooth Motion technology, initially exclusive to RTX 50 Series, is now supported on RTX 40 Series GPUs via the GeForce 590.26 Preview Driver. This AI-driven frame generation enhances ...
If you have watched any movie on any TV in the past few years, there’s a good chance you’ve encountered motion smoothing. Even if you don’t know what it is, you might have noticed a favorite film ...
Roku's latest firmware update, OS 13, added a slew of new features, including Backdrops, Roku Smart Picture, and even some new cars to the iconic Roku City screensaver. However, it seems to have also ...
Motion interpolation, or "motion smoothing" as it is commonly called, is the video processing done by today's television screens that claims to increase perceived frame rate and alleviate motion blur.
Over the years, televisions have grown not just in footprint, but also in the number of software features packed underneath — maybe to the point of confusion. Even if you pick the perfect size and ...