Well, I'm happy - the timing is good for me - by the time the screens have achieved good market penetration and prices are coming down, I'll be ready to upgrade from plasma. I trust they'll include the latest HDMI spec in the features, especially 48bit colour depth, and that source material will provide same. But what happened to SED TV?
@Tom - Projectors? For a dedicated home cinema maybe, but not in a living room. Seriously, have you tried to watch a projected picture when there's sunlight streaming through the windows? You can't see sh*t.
Still, the idea of a large screen that decends from the ceiling is an attractive one .....
How hard are these to manufacture compared to the micro-displays that Emagin corporation makes? The have been developing this technology for years. Is the technology for the large displays licensed from kodak like the microdisplays?
By Christian BergerPosted Thursday 26th June 2008 04:37 GMT
Please do it with a decent resoltion. There's little sense in having a 30 inch display with only 1080 lines. Nobody is going to do television with those displays anyhow as the largest usable size for HDTV is about 24 inch. Beyond that you will see the individual pixels.
If I was such a company I would start getting some cash from normal sized (eg 5-10 inch) television screens. Those are easier to build and you can get enought money to experiment with those large screens.
err... do you actually know what an inch is? It's 1/12 of a foot or about 2.5 cm.
5-10 inch is not a 'normal' size for a TV - I'd say more like 20-32 inch.
What do you mean "nobody is going to do television with [30 inch] screens as the largest usable size for HDTV is about 24 inch."?? 24 inch is ridiculously SMALL for HDTV - most people agree that at a comfortable viewing distance you need at least a 40 inch to get the benefit of Full HD (1080p), though of course it is all entirely dependent on what you consider an appropriate viewing distance, which will depend on the size and layout of your room.
We are currently advancing research and development in view of OLED production at IPS Alpha's Himeji Plant for the future, but nothing specific has yet been decided on the commercialization of our OLED TV at the moment."
By THOMAS STEWART VON DRASHEKPosted Sunday 29th June 2008 01:14 GMT
One Problem Solved is that advertised life of 30,000 hours turned out to be actually 17,000 Hours. That has been corrected by increasing Blue Phosphors Luminosity efficency to 28% from 25%. However, OLED uses such BLAST of Energy Field, actual colors are More like NEON Tubes color. Perhaps thats NOT critical?
Its extreme Brightness that creates Such High contrast Number of 100,000:1, which has many offsetting qualities, yet still 40" Neon Tube?
Comments on: Panasonic parent makes 30in OLED TV play
Screw large-screen... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 25th June 2008 10:29 GMT
Screw rollup displays #
By Francis Boyle Posted Wednesday 25th June 2008 13:24 GMT
rollups? #
By Tom Posted Wednesday 25th June 2008 13:36 GMT
Screw OLED monitors... #
By LeBeourfCurtaine Posted Wednesday 25th June 2008 23:29 GMT
OK #
By RG Posted Thursday 26th June 2008 01:02 GMT
OLEDS Technology #
By andy k Posted Thursday 26th June 2008 01:32 GMT
Please with a decent resolution #
By Christian Berger Posted Thursday 26th June 2008 04:37 GMT
OLEDs info #
By Ron Mertens Posted Thursday 26th June 2008 08:49 GMT
@Christian Berger #
By John Posted Thursday 26th June 2008 11:50 GMT
Panasonic makes a return! #
By ERich Posted Friday 27th June 2008 05:50 GMT
Tech Problems Include.... #
By THOMAS STEWART VON DRASHEK Posted Sunday 29th June 2008 01:14 GMT