Panasonic is a real innovator for display and is once again thinking outside the box for its 2025 TV lineup. Last year, it brought some incredible increase in TV audio, and this year, it is again wondering how your TV will talk to your computer.
With some help with the CEC (consumer electronics control), when your laptop is turned on, the Panasonic Z 95 BO LED will be turned on, or once you turn it off, you will close automatically. This is usually not the case for most monitors, which will be closed only after a long time when no signal is available in the display port connection.
And when you can get some function like CEC for a PC used with a TV pre -TV, it was complicated to set up. But Panasonic has found a two -dimensional solution using regular cables.
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A new era of CEC for PC
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Perhaps without knowing it, the CEC is a feature that you use several times a day. Whenever you turn on a gaming console and it turns on your TV, or even controls the volume level with a streaming stick – it is the magic of the CEC.
Earlier, a unified control scheme often requires special CEC dongles or even the art of gut hub so that it all works easily.
But its applications on the PC are limited. Earlier, a unified control scheme often requires special CEC dongles or even the art of gut hub so that it all works easily. That’s enough to say, they are about to break the deal for most consumers.
Although the use of PC with a TV can be niche, the new Panasonic CEC solution makes both easier and between the two devices that connect the tissue.
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If you are someone who has never thought of using TV as a monitor, you are missing. TV has begun to raise a sharp refresh rate in an attempt to promote its appeal. LG and Samsung are fighting to dominate the best gaming TV with LG G5 OLED and Samsung S95F OLED, which are both equipped with 165Hz refresh rate – a rare first for TV.
Hesse has added 165Hz to its entire 2025 TV lineup, its cheapest U6QG mini -minus TV minus. What is even more interesting is that Hens cuts its U8QG and U9QG models with USB-C input for charging and video passth, which proves how much Panasonic is committed to improving PC experience on its TV.
Some makers are playing with dynamic refresh rates in various resolutions. Samsung’s QN990F 8K TV is the first adoption, which allows you to play in up to 240Hz in 4K resolution with its motion accelerator feature. Of course, you will need a beautiful powerful PC, but at least TCL covered you similar technology at a low refresh rate.
PC to use as a console replacement
PC gaming is a matter of very popular use to connect a PC to a TV, and one of the main reasons is that I replaced my PC monitor with LGC4 OO LEDs last year. One of the biggest complaints I was, was the only power supply concerns that Panasonic was to fix in its new seats.
If it works according to the intention, this better CEC functionality can give Panasonic TV an edge against the competition when used along with several different devices, including laptops, tower PC, and mini -PC. I personally use my mini -PC with a TV all the time, because it allows me to write movies, watch movies and watch shows, edit videos, and (the best part) to play video games with their sofa.
Once Panasonic’s 2025 models target the shelf, when they are booting their PC or turning off the TV, they will not need to wander for the remote. It is all skeptical in the experience and is completely smooth.
Samsung and LG, if you are reading this, I hope next year’s models will create something like that.


