Dell Enters HDTV Market with Plasma Display 285
ThinSkin writes "It was only a matter of time before PC giant Dell would jump headlong into the HDTV market. But what does a company built around making inexpensive PCs know about HDTVs? ExtremeTech has done a full review with benchmarks on Dell's offering, the Dell W4200HD 42" Plasma HDTV."
Oh no, the tuner scare again (Score:5, Insightful)
Blah! I have to say that the cost of a tuner is either in or out of the price. I mean that if a TV sells for $3000 with a tuner than I bet a bargain based TV will sell for $2700-$2800 without a tuner. The cost doesn't magically go away. Besides I like the tuner to be outside the TV so I can upgrade one component for a little money verses buying a whole new TV when (I-Z)DTV comes out or when I want new features that haven't been invented yet. Read tuner not tuna, so no dolphins were injured in the making of this post.
Re:Oh no, the tuner scare again (Score:3, Insightful)
If your cable company provides a tuner for a cheap rental fee, that is when you may want to save the money on no internal tuna.
Re:Oh no, the tuner scare again (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh no, the tuner scare again (Score:2)
You plug one of the outputs into your tv, which on high end sets there are usually a plethora of (IMHO too many because its more convenient to plug these devices into a reciever which then has one output to the TV.
On an HDTV ready set, again you just use one of the many inputs other than the coax input.
Remove the possibility o
Re:(I-Z)DTV and floppy drives. (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, but many of us have been waiting for years to play PC games on a widescreen. Some of us are already doing it, but the majority of us would like to be doing it very soon. Some companies like these guys [syntaxgroups.com] are recognizing the demand.
So I guess my point is that the 'killer app' that starts widespread adaptation of HDTV may have nothing to do with television at all, but rather with the PS2, Xbox, Gamecube, and
Re:Oh no, the tuner scare again (Score:2)
You have a SDTV? Isn't that kind of a waste? Sure, it's nice to be able to watch the subchannels on one's PBS feed, (avoiding Tucker Carlson, and the more marginal programs) but most channels don't use them for anything more than weather graphics... I suppose the picture's marginally nicer than a ntsc feed.
They do it well (Score:5, Interesting)
They are particularly good about not reinventing the wheel, rather, working with other vendors or manufacturers who have already figured it out (so to speak) and then putting the Dell spin on it if needed. Once again, a pretty cool business process from my point of view.
As an aside, I don't work for Dell and I don't buy their products (I like Sony Vaio's and HP printers for some reason) but I do admire their business acumen and their business models. (I do, however, have extreme HDTV Plasma Display envy).
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
On another note, I've seen an interesting switch in the past couple of years. When buying prebuilt home computers, it's generally the lower end ones that carry intel processo
Re:They do it well (Score:5, Insightful)
If that means "Dell doesn't really invent anything they just take already good ideas and commoditize them", then I agree.
Plasma short lifespan... (Score:5, Interesting)
Are LCD tv's any better?
If I'm gonna lay out over $3K...I expect a tv that will still be working well for at least 5-10 years. All my old ones did....
Re:Plasma short lifespan... (Score:2, Informative)
Yes. They don't burn in images.
You're 100% right, Plasma TVs are not worth buying unless you are the type of person who buys a new TV every year anyway.
Re:Plasma short lifespan... (Score:2, Interesting)
Are there any issues with burn-in on the HD projection TVs? Can you play video games on them without loss of picture quality?
From what I understand, LCD TVs don't have these problems, however they're not exactly cheap.
Re:Plasma short lifespan... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Plasma short lifespan... (Score:2)
I dunno...if you're very nearsighted...big tv in a small room
Re:Plasma short lifespan... (Score:2)
If you need a thin TV go with LCD or DLP. Plasmas are heavy as hell, typically have lower resolution, and they burn in (I've heard that this is a myth, and I've heard that its true).
I've got a 46" HDTV RPTV, and the picture is amazing. It has better resolution than both models of these Dells.
Re:They do it well (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
Dell might be a well run company. But, a "lean & Mean R&D machine"? I don't think so. Dell isn't known for inventing new products. They are known for taking someone else's invention and using their supply chain advantage to put that someone else out of business.
If and only if R&D == (Score:3, Funny)
Re:They do it well (Score:3, Informative)
Re:They do it well (Score:2)
You are not alone in admiring Dell. Fortune magazine [fortune.com] has named Dell as #1 on their annual list of most admired companies [msn.com].
...and who's on second? (Score:2)
Here is the top 5 (Score:2)
1. Dell
2. General Electric Co.
3. Starbucks Corp.
4. Wal-Mart
5. Southwest Airlines
Re:They do it well (Score:3, Informative)
Unless you consider that many other companies are getting right out of plasma production. At any rate neither of their displays are HDTV devices. They lack the resolution to even display 720p at 16:9. Suprised no one sues for false advertising.
24" 1920x1200/12msec LCD is pretty interesting too (Score:5, Informative)
My christmas lights [komar.org] and BBQ Grill [komar.org] would look HULK'ing [komar.org] on that monitor! ;-)
Re:24" 1920x1200/12msec LCD is pretty interesting (Score:2)
One page version (Score:3, Informative)
Please mod me down right now! (Score:3, Insightful)
Who cares? Do you honestly think manufacturers build their own parts? Evderybody is selling something to someone else. A SONY DVD player with Panasonic chips and a Matsushita mechanism with a taiwanese PCB designed with Japanese software... Sold in Europe to play American movies.
Dell will probably re-brand someone else's design, or outsource the design. Remember the Casio products re-branded as Tandy in the 80s? Same idea.
Re:Please mod me down right now! (Score:4, Insightful)
Not much, I'd wager...since said company doesn't know much about making inexpensive PCs to start with (see above post).
What Dell does know a lot about is marketing inexpensive PCs...and I'll bet that knowledge can be made to apply to the HDTV market fairly easily.
Re:Please mod me down right now! (Score:2)
So, which company is it?
Dell probably hasn't much to do with it (Score:3, Insightful)
Who is making it for them? (Score:2)
Dell is NOT making this (any more than they "make" anything else), so who is? Sampo? I can only guess its one of the lower end companies, especially to meet Dell's price point.
Dell (Score:2, Interesting)
Do they really need to know much about HDTV? It's probably like with PCs, buy cheap components in large volumes, assemble them together. Sell online at a discount. Works with pretty much anything.
Re:Dell (Score:2)
1) Buy stuff cheap
2) Add value
3) Profit!
Not everyone... (Score:2, Informative)
For a lot of people, it probably won't matter. Dell is a name that most people know, and a good amount trust, so it is expected that they can make fairly reliable/quality products. Some consumers need to go no further...
Plasma/LCD vs DLP (Score:5, Interesting)
I dont think image quality is better than a CRT
And I dont need to mount it on the wall.
I consider either a DLP big screen or projector as a more logical choice and the price helps also.
Re:Plasma/LCD vs DLP (Score:3, Interesting)
there is no compelling reason for me to ever want a plasma tv.
Amen. While I love the large screen, the cost and lifetime issues make it a non-starter for me. Personally, I'm holding out hope for OLED TV's [cnet.com]. But it looks like we'll need to wait until 2007... hurry up already!
Don't lump LCD in with Plasma! (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, it's pricey, but everything with better than 720p resolution is pricey, especially the coming 1080p DLP sets. Then again, if 1280 X 720 is good enough for you, then price becomes a compelling factor as you say.
Re:Plasma/LCD vs DLP (Score:2)
Not HDTV (Score:5, Informative)
-Mike
Re:Not HDTV (Score:2)
The only resolutions that are "HD" in the ATSC standard are 720p and 1080i.
Not a true HDTV (Score:5, Informative)
"The W4200HD has a native pixel resolution of 1024x768, and as such, isn't a true HD device, since it doesn't have enough pixels to draws [sic] a 1280x720 (720p) HDTV image."
Which means it also can't do 1080i (which requires 1920x1080, almost twice the horizontal resolution this TV is capable of).
Re:Not a true HDTV (Score:2)
There is a difference between doing true HDTV and being able to accept an HDTV signal. To marketing though, it doesnt matter. HDTV is just a buzz word.
Re:Not a true HDTV (Score:2)
Re:Not a true HDTV (Score:2)
Re:Not a true HDTV (Score:2)
There are, as far as I know, no CRTs that can actually resolve 1,000 lines of resolution. Really expensive tubes from Sony (found in their BVM series, $30,000 and up) will hold 800 or 900. They
Re:Not a true HDTV (Score:2)
Re:Not a true HDTV (Score:2)
Using your logic, these Sony CRTs are putting out an even _higher_ resolution than 1080i? I fail to believe that..
Also, see the reply above mine, regarding silliness with measuring a CRT's "pixels".
Re:Not a true HDTV (Score:2)
I bought a 50" RPTV for $2400 about 3 years ago. I Believe that is "consumer pricing" for an HDTV, right? It has 1600 horizontal scanlines, meaning it can at least do 720p, and is not too far away from true 1080i resolution. (Toshiba 50H81.)
+ in home service... (Score:2, Funny)
Semi-offtopic: LCD vs Plamsa (Score:2)
I quickly realized that I want LCD instead of plasma because of the lifespan and power consumption efficiency.
That being said, the other hold up is 1080p. I know nothing is using it but I want it and to my knowledge only SHARPs 50" LCD has it. It seems to me it makes sense that 1080p will be a lot sharper than 720p since it will be running in a native resolution to my understanding.
Does anyone know of any sites or resources that thoroughly com
The sharp has no problem. (Score:2)
You're right though all the others had mostly washed out color when compared to plasma.
Jumping the shark (Score:2)
Reminds me of a TV commercial for a brand of salsa sauce where the executives of a large conglomerate are seated around the boardroom table trying to decide what their next product should be (like it matters):
"Should we make salsa or oven mits?"
Dell is not HP and they're not IBM. When they started branding TVs, printers, PDAs, etc., they jumped the shark
disposable $4000 appliances (Score:3, Insightful)
Plasma TVs are being pushed like crazy, but the things burn out, guaranteed. A friend of mine said a coworker dropped well over $4,000 on a top of the line plasma screen from Sony several years ago. One day, he pushed the power button, there was a fizz noise, and...that was that. He said sometimes they go dim, or parts stick on or off like a defective LCD, etc...sometimes it just doesn't turn on one day.
Since when was that acceptable? We pay 4-8 times less for a dishwasher, refridgerator, washer, or drier...and they are considered "major appliances", and expected to last at least a decade!
I know at least in Massachusetts there's an "implied merchantability"(implied warranty, to grossly simplify) on any product...and wouldn't you expect a TV, devices which traditionally last decades, to last more than 3-4 years?
Re:disposable $4000 appliances (Score:3, Insightful)
You pay the price for being an early adopter. New plasma screens have a 60,000 half life(Half brightn
Re:disposable $4000 appliances (Score:2)
Re:disposable $4000 appliances (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:disposable $4000 appliances (Score:2, Insightful)
Oh, I don't know. Perhaps about the time rebooting or flat out reinstalling became the accepted means to fix a computer problem?
Re:disposable $4000 appliances (Score:2)
Hey, feel free to stick with nickel cadmium technology instead... the wonder technology that may only last for hours or even minutes depening on the application, and once it's discharged once, you can't re-use it!
Li-Ion ain't so bad after all, huh?
Hard drives that suddenly aren't designed for "continuous or heavy duty use"
Oh, those are still available if you're willing to pay for them. The MTBF for a server-class drive ha
Re:disposable $4000 appliances (Score:2)
You are thinking alkalines or maybe the older dry cells. Nickel Cadmium (NiCd) batteries are rechargeable. The same goes for Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMH). NiCd is the oldest of the small rechargeables, I think. Lead-Acid is older but I don't remember them in sizes smaller than motorcycle batte
Re:disposable $4000 appliances (Score:2, Informative)
Nice logic.
There is a lot of FUD out there concerning the longevity of plasma displays. Check out this article [plasmatvbuyingguide.com] for a sensible analysis of the problem.
(If you're too lazy to read the article, it basically says that you can reasonably expect to be watching your plasma tv 10 years from now)
What do they know? (Score:2, Insightful)
Apparently not much, because at a native resolution of 1024x768, that panel is NOT HD.
Maybe just wait for SED display. (Score:5, Interesting)
Flat panel SED [canon.com]
Photos of SED [sagetechnology.com]
16:9 please: 1366x768 1280x720 (Score:2)
Re:16:9 please: 1366x768 1280x720 (Score:2)
And you might as well get a 1280x720 vs 1366x768, so at least your ABC and FOX can be displated native. (I'd like to kill the numbskull who though interlaced was good idea for HD)
There is a bigger fish to be had... better n cheap (Score:3, Interesting)
This set also comes with their PureDrive video processor which handles processing, filtering of all HD, SD and ED signals... for those rednecks out there... Standard TV or SD, ED or 480progressive signals and of course, HD or 720p. This processing unit on his tv.. a 43 inch now confirmed, fuckin rocked serious ass. Cartoon Network and Dexters Laboratory or Toonami never made Standard TV look so good and for us size queens,.. bigger is better... LOL.
But seriously.. even with the PixelWorks chip... the Pioneer is not only superior quality in terms of longevity, but that PureVision Box rocks and is an excellent video processor for the buck. Another comparison is my 30 inch Syntax Olevia HDTV lcd has the same PixelWorks chip and contrary to popular belief... it is freaking awesome for the buck... especially after you fine tune each input via the setup on the remote, each input has it's own settings...
So unless Dell can come up with a better trick,.. I say go Pioneer for Plasma... Syntax Olevia or other for a better deal and and better quality LCDs. By the way... I got mine for $999 at MicroCenter in Boston and with my Denon 1910, with DVI and 720p upscaling... Finding Nemo, Sky Captain and LOTR 3, Return of the King with very good night fight scenes on the Syntax... gave me a good ole woo... er uh... you know what I mean.
Nuff said.
Zion
Re:There is a bigger fish to be had... better n ch (Score:2)
I've noticed that TVs always look like crap in the stores, probably because they're all displaying the same fuzzy cable feed.
W4200HD (Score:2)
why would you blow your money on one of these? (Score:3, Insightful)
Advertorial Alert (Score:5, Interesting)
This fellow, ThinSkin, is a schill for ExtremeTech.com. Check his user info [slashdot.org]. In February, ThinSkin has submitted four articles that were accepted for Slashdot publication and all of them were links to ExtremeTech.com content.
Clearly this is paid placement to increase traffic to ExtremeTech.
Re:Advertorial Alert (Score:2)
Re:Advertorial Alert (Score:4, Insightful)
Or, these are the only two websites he ever reads.
Still, I have to admire his ability to get submissions accepted. In my six years here, I've never done so, even though my submissions usually cover topics of substance.
Hmmm, I'm clearly going about this all wrong!
I'll set up a script that automatically checks for new articles on ExtremeTech, and then submits them to /.!
RIP Heathkit. (Score:2)
So for me, looks like it'll be at least another year before a
An HDTV that isn't HDTV... (Score:2)
Look, I know lots of people will buy these things and be ecstatically happy with them, but can't we have just a little bit of truth-in-advertising? If it's not HDTV, don't call it HDTV.
93 pounds (Score:2)
And it probably uses up batteries quickly too.
Re:Man (Score:2, Flamebait)
And what about burn-in. Who wants to spend several thousand on a TV that WILL need replacing in three to four years?!
My parents still use a color TV they bought in the fucking 70s!!!
Re:Selling plasma HDTVs is not a rocket science... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Selling plasma HDTVs is not a rocket science... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I hate this dishonest junk.... (Score:2)
Personally, I can't wait for the days of hexagonal resolutions.
Re:I hate this dishonest junk.... (Score:2)
That is a SQUARE resolution, not widescreen.
They mentioned that the model with that resolution had non-square pixels. So 1024 fat pixels by 768 skinny pixels.
Re:I hate this dishonest junk.... (Score:2)
From TFA
Not to defend Dell for calling it HD, but it appears they are not alone.
Re:I hate this dishonest junk.... (Score:2)
Not a square... 1024x1024 would be square... I learned that in the second grade.
What you mean is that it is not a 12x9 resolution(all HDTV res's), instead it is a 4x3 resolution.
Re:I hate this dishonest junk.... (Score:2)
Rectangular pixels (Score:3, Insightful)
Yea, I agree, it is dishonest to say this is a HDTV since it isnt 1280 wide.
Re:I hate this dishonest junk.... (Score:2)
The CRT models should handle it in most cases
I have an old 21 inch CRT monitor that does 2048x1536, so real 1080 works fine with my pchdtv card. Apple does have a couple of LCDs that can do it, but they are spendy.
Re:I hate this dishonest junk.... (Score:2)
It won't even do 720p, 1280x720, which is still HD. I believe in the next 6 months or so we will be seeing more flat panel 1080p capable TVs coming out. I'll be happy as I cannot stand interlaced video.
Re:I would like to enter Michael Dell (Score:2)
Wrong! I have a big TV, and my penis is decidedly average in size.
Re:I would like to enter Michael Dell (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I would like to enter Michael Dell (Score:2, Interesting)
How tired and cliched is this arguement. At least you didn't say it was bought by men going through a mid life crisis.
Hell this overcompensating logic could apply to just about everything posted on slashdot. Why do people buy iPods? Small penis. Why do people overclock a mac mini? Inadequate in bed.
Sorry its just this combined with another comment using the term "Jump the Shark" was a little too much for me. Lets just Skip the Monk
Re:I finally figured it out (Score:2)
1. It's plasma, not LCD. Big, big difference. LCD is FAR more expensive in the same sizes. Like 10x.
2. Some plasma screens ARE true HDTV, just not these.
3. It's hard to tell the lifespan, because they haven't been around long enough.
4. They have GREAT angular viewing ability, and have the most intense, bright colors of any technology out there. Compare them at an angle with any type of rear projection.
5. Burn-in is a problem, BUT... for the same money as one of the other flat-screen techno
Re:I finally figured it out (Score:2)
2. You don't find it odd to pay $3,400 for a TV that does NOT do real HD?!
3. My parents use an old Zenith TV they bought in the 70s. Do you think that any LCD or plasma TV built today will be used in thirty years?
4. I was wrong about that too, thanks.
5. Oh yeah, spending $3,400 every couple of years is a great idea!
6. You can buy smaller CRTs for practically nothing. Exactly how small is your house that you have
Re:I finally figured it out (Score:2)
2. Of course, but your criticisms were aimed at the technology as a whole, not this specific incarnation. Real HDTV plasma sets are readily available, for less than this.
3. I bet it looks like crap, too. Tell me this: do you have any expectation of being able to use ANY current piece of technology in 30 years? Nothing lasts forever.
5. I wasn't referring to this device specifically: I've seen similar TV's for as low as $1100. And when you consider that equiv LCDs of the same s
Re:I finally figured it out (Score:2)
And if HDTV is so great, in and of itself, why aren't people enjoying REAL HD?! I.e., sitting outside and watching the world. You can't get higher def than standing in front of the Grand Canyon or walking through Yosemite yourself.
I guess that makes me an old foggy because I just don't get you youngsters and your crazy ways.
Re:Gamers shouldn't bother with plasma (Score:2)
Do your grandparents live in Korea, by any chance?
m-
Mods on Crack (Score:2, Flamebait)
how about lame, trite, repetitous, or sophmoric?
Re:Plasma doesnt matter anymore (Score:2)
For the size of the screen, I haven't been impressed with any of the direct view prices. Then again, I