The Displace wireless TV, just hanging out.
Scott Stein/CNET
There are a lot of new TVs introduced at CES in Las Vegas (including a line from Roku this year), but this one is unique. Built by a startup called Displace TV, it’s a completely wireless, 55-inch OLED screen designed to be literally stuck on a wall or window with big suction cups. Power is supplied not by plugging it into the wall, but by inserting hot-swappable batteries to keep the picture going for hours.
Read more: These are the must-see highlights of CES so far, plus the wackiest products at CES 2023.
Watch this:
Displace TV Is A Wireless TV You Can Hang On Your Window
3:09
One of the Displace TV’s hot-swappable batteries.
Scott Stein/CNET
Aside from the screen the system includes a box roughly the size of a PC tower, into which you plug your devices. The signal travels wirelessly from the box to the television. In fact you can use it with multiple TVs simultaneously to create a multi-screen system or even one giant TV.
Another novel detail? Displace TV doesn’t come with a remote. Instead you’ll use gestures to control the smart TV streaming and other systems. There’s also an app so you can use your phone to control the TV.
Those big black rings? Suction cups.
Scott Stein/CNET
Displace TV is not cheap. A system with one screen and the box costs $3,000, while a setup with four screens and a single box runs $9,000. A typical, wired 55-inch OLED TV like the LG C2 costs about half as much as the basic Displace TV. It’s also notable that LG itself introduced a wireless OLED TV of its own, albeit a much more traditional one.
LG C2 (Wired) OLED TV, 55-Inch
$1,497 at Amazon
Displace TV says the TV will ship later this year.