Hitachi is the latest manufacturer to embrace Roku, as the electronics giant introduces three new models powered powered by Roku’s TV operating system.

First teased back in June, the new Hitachi 4K TVs go on sale in the U.S. this week, following in the footsteps of TCL, which was the first Roku TV partner to bring 4K sets to market earlier this year.

Hitachi 4K

Above: Hitachi 4K

All 4K Hitachi Roku TV models sport a quad-core processor, with a starting price of $599 for the 55” model that will be available through Sam’s Club imminently, while a 50″ ($499) and 65” ($999) will follow swiftly after. Roku notes that it will launch 100 TV models in North America in 2016 alone.

Though Roku is perhaps better known around the world for its own-brand hardware, including streaming sticks and boxes, the company opened up a licensing program to TV-makers back in 2014. By the end of the following year, it was estimated that Roku represented around 8 percent of the smart TV market in the U.S., with figures suggesting this had jumped to 12 percent in the first half of 2016.

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But 4K, it seems, is the future, and today’s launch comes in the wake of a noticeable shift towards Ultra HD going mainstream.

Earlier this week, Google announced the new Chromecast Ultra, revealing that the new $69 contraption will support Ultra HD video streams from Netflix, Vudu, and YouTube. But perhaps more crucially, Google also revealed that its very own movie-streaming platform, Google Play Movies, will soon offer 4K content too.

It’s also worth adding here that Google’s currently pushing its own Roku OS-competing Android TV platform to the masses. Earlier this week, Chinese electronics upstart Xiaomi announced its first proper product launch for the U.S. market with the $69 4K Mi Box, powered by Android TV.

According to recent research, 4K penetration among U.S. households was less than 5 percent last year, but this figure is expected to jump by more than double in 2016 as Ultra HD pricing plummets. And by 2019, IHS Markit estimates, that number should hit around 35 percent.

As more companies such as Hitachi, Roku, and Google embrace 4K, expect to see a sharp rise in available 4K content too, something that has hitherto been sorely lacking.

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