Samsung and Intel co-develop ‘SmartPower HDR’ for Panther Lake OLED laptops, with up to 22% power savings — dynamic voltage control lowers power without sacrifi

Samsung and Intel co-develop 'SmartPower HDR' for Panther Lake OLED laptops, with up to 22% power savings — dynamic voltage control lowers power without sacrifi

Samsung's new 'Odyssey 3D' 6K monitor takes center stage at CES 2026, features solid eye-tracking

The potential SmartPower HDR carries is enormous, considering how (poorly) Windows handles HDR. In non-color-managed apps like File Explorer, the OS simulates an SDR color space inside an HDR container, resulting in washed-out blacks. For this reason, many choose to keep HDR disabled until they're playing a game or watching something that actually needs it. System-wide, always-on HDR is still a distant reality for most Windows users.

On the other hand, Apple uses Extended Dynamic Range (EDR) inside its Mini-LED MacBook Pro displays, allowing it to handle SDR and HDR content side-by-side through sophisticated dimming zone control. The display's timing controller is aware of precisely which pixels need to be brighter and need more power. Not only is this beneficial for image quality, but it also helps save battery life, so SmartPower HDR is not too dissimilar in concept from this tech.

That ties into the entire point of HDR, which is mostly higher brightness, but those peaks can only be reached in content either natively mastered in HDR or upconverted using tools like AutoHDR or RTX HDR. So, whenever you're interacting with SDR content, simply having HDR enabled in Windows will still lead to higher power consumption since the display is always waiting for/expecting HDR peaks. SmartPower HDR fixes this by making the display intelligent and content-aware.

Samsung says this reduction in power draw can lead to 30-40 minutes of extra battery life, which would only add to Panther Lake's efficiency claims. We don't have details on when SmartPower HDR is actually launching, but we'll likely see it debut on Core Ultra 3 Series laptops shipping this year, including possibly Samsung's own Galaxy Book6 (Pro and Ultra) lineup, which does carry OLED displays.

Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.

Key considerations

  • Investor positioning can change fast
  • Volatility remains possible near catalysts
  • Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows

Reference reading

More on this site

Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.

Leave a Comment