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Burn-in and image retention are possible on virtually any display. It is rare for an average TV consumer to create an environment that could result in burn-in. Most cases of burn-in in televisions is a result of static images or on-screen elements displaying on the screen uninterrupted for many hours or days at a time – with brightness typically at peak levels. So, it is possible to create image retention in almost any display if one really tries hard enough. And even if image retention does occur from extreme usage, it can usually be mitigated within a short period of time by turning the display off for a while, and watching a few hours of varying content (such as your standard TV watching and channel-surfing). ^Daphane
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Not sure sorry. It does have an art screen saver picture mode I believe. I can tell you this is an excellent tv and worth every penny.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I wouldn't. LED screens are better at not having burn-in than plasma TVs were, but because it's still a light being projected on a screen it can still happen. The best thing to do if you're looking for something like that is to use a screensaver, or create a live screensaver with a few pictures that can keep changing so it won't burn in the screen. Make sure the pictures take up the entire screen too, black bars on the sides, top, etc. There's also a tv series by Samsung that is called the Frame, it's expensive but I think it's more designed to have a stationary picture on for long times. But you'll pay probably twice the price for that one, so I'd look into a screensaver. Hope this helps, good luck and happy shopping.
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