Contrast-rich OLED displays sure are pretty, but they’re also still too pricey. TCL may have the remedy we’ve been waiting for—a new, cheaper way to make OLED screens for laptops thanks to “inkjet printing.” No, it’s not like your at-home paper printer… Okay, it’s kind of like your printer. On Thursday, TCL CSOT shared details of a new China-exclusive laptop, the Lenovo Legion R9000P, complete with a 16-inch OLED display made by TCL’s touted “IJP”—aka inkjet printing—manufacturing process. The laptop screen supposedly hits a max 240Hz refresh rate, though neither company is sharing much else about the laptop specs. Lenovo sells several different Legion R9000 laptops in the Asian market. All that matters is the screen, or, really, how TCL helped make the display. Organic light-emitting diode displays make use of thousands of individual self-emissive lights that can display red, green, and blue colors. Most OLEDs are constructed using a vacuum thermal evaporation process that relied on so-called fine metal masks (FMM) to pattern the organic substrates. It’s a complicated and often wasteful process that requires specialized factories to make these screens. TCL said that using inkjet printing is more efficient and lower-cost since it doesn’t use an FMM or waste as much material.