Cancel any outdoor plans for next year because LG is dropping a flagship RGB LED TV in 2026. The new MRGB95B TV will use an upgraded processor and a brighter panel, and it will achieve 100 percent coverage of BT.2020, DCI-P3, and Adobe RGB color gamuts. Translation: insanely accurate color. The most exciting part of this new model is that it will come in more “everyday” screen sizes than one might expect, ranging from a massive 100 inches to a more normal modern size of 75 inches, meaning consumers might actually buy this for their posh new living room.
RGB LEDs allow for brighter displays with more accurate color, not to be confused with micro LED displays, where each pixel is its own self-emmisive LED. RGB LED uses clusters of red, green, and blue that illuminate multiple pixels at once. It’s the next step in color accuracy in TV displays, following the quantum dot displays that have been popular for several years. —Parker Hall
Samsung Teases New Micro RGB TVs
Samsung is also getting in on the new technology, with Micro RGB TVs that will range in sizes from 55 to 115 inches in 2026. The new models represent the smallest RGB LED screen sizes we have seen from any brand so far (though we expect competition from more affordable RGB players like Hisense and TCL to come).
Just like LG, Samsung is announcing a next-generation, heavily AI-optimized chipset for its new TV, and Samsung also claims it hits 100 percent of BT.2020, which again should mean jaw-droppingly accurate color. We’ll have to get eyes on it to tell you which brand does it better, but it’ll be exciting to see the next generation of TV tech finally hit store shelves in 2026. Let the South Korean brand battle commence. —Parker Hall
Google Adds Find Hub on Wear OS
It wasn't long ago that Google completely redid its device tracking app to align much more closely with Apple's Find My. Now, the next step is introducing it on even more platforms. The company brought its Find Hub app to Wear OS this week, allowing anyone running a Wear OS smartwatch to launch the app and see where their devices were last seen.
This isn't some half-baked version: you can track your device via Google Maps straight from the watch, play a sound to ping its location, secure the device, and even factory reset it. You'll just really need a cellular version of the smartwatch to make the most of this capability, especially if your phone is lost.
Nvidia May Cut Consumer GPU Supply in 2026
A memory shortage is looming on the horizon in 2026, and we're all bracing for impact as to how wide-ranging the effects will be. The pricing of some of the best graphics cards, for example, has remained stable so far. But will it last? A new report indicates this global memory crunch could affect Nvidia's supply of graphics cards in 2026. A rumor posted by Taiwanese tech site Benchlife claims that Nvidia will be reducing its current-gen, RTX 50-series graphics cards by up to 40 percent in the first half of next year. That reduction was based on a direct comparison to the available supply of Nvidia GPUs in the first half of 2025.
While I wouldn't chalk this up to more than a rumor at this point, it feels increasingly probable given the circumstances. Nvidia was originally rumored to launch the mid-generational refresh to the RTX 50-series (typically known as the "Super" line) in early 2026, but the latest reports say that late 2026 is now more likely.

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