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 an MCU flick in your living room, ...
For many people, motion smoothing on TVs is only appropriate for gaming and watching live sports; enthusiasts typically prefer turning off the feature to watch anything else because it can detract ...
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 ...
Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google. Whether you're considering buying a new TV or your old flat panel seems to be doing fine, there are still ways to optimize your viewing experience ...
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 ...
Motion smoothing is great for live TV events, but can be quite a pain if you’re trying to watch a TV show or movie. Motion smoothing is one of the most polarizing features of modern TVs. When watching ...
Have you ever watched a breathtaking cinematic scene, a sweeping landscape or a tense, slow-motion moment, only to feel pulled out of the experience by distracting stutters or unnatural smoothness?
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 ...