- IT Office Moves
Setting Up IT Infrastructure in a New Office: A Complete Guide
3 Mar, 2026







£3017.15 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £2,514 ex-VAT, this Samsung QB85C is a sensible “proper spec” digital signage choice rather than a budget screen. The big wins are Samsung’s Tizen ecosystem and the fact it’s a straightforward all-in-one panel with Wi‑Fi built in—useful when you want to get sites live quickly without juggling extra media players. Samsung tends to be reliable for business signage deployments, and the built-in processing means you’re less likely to hit a “someone forgot the player” problem or pay for separate hardware across multiple locations.
That said, it’s not the cheapest way to do signage, so I’d only buy it if you actually need an 85" 4K panel and you’ll benefit from the integrated player/software. If you’re running fewer screens, frequently changing content, or you already have a solid signage box at the edge, you might get better value by matching a cheaper display with a dedicated player. Also, double-check your mounting and viewing environment—larger panels punish bad planning (glare, contrast distance, content resolution). In short: buy this if you want a dependable, low-fuss Samsung-powered signage display for multi-site or managed deployments; don’t if your use case is simple or you’re already set up with external media players and want to spend less on the screen.

Sony
Sony Bravia Professional Displays FW-32BZ30J1 - 32" Diagonal Class LED-backlit LCD display - digital signage - 720p 1366 x 768 - HDR

ViewSonic
43" DLED commercial display 3840*2160

Sony
Sony PrimeSupport Pro - Extended service agreement - parts and labour (for televisions) - 2 years (4th/5th year) - for Sony TO-49BZ35F-IR10, TO-49X70H-IR10, TO-49X80H-IR10

Samsung
Samsung QE75T - 75" Diagonal Class QET Series LED-backlit LCD display - digital signage - 4K UHD (2160p) 3840 x 2160