Canon-Toshiba Joint Venture On SED Collapses 93
An anonymous reader writes "SED (Surface-conduction Electron-emitter Display) displays were supposed to be the brightest, most energy-efficient TVs to hit the market, so Canon and Toshiba created a joint venture in 2004 to capitalize on the emerging technology. The resulting entity, SED Inc., was sued in 2005 by Nano-Proprietary, the company that licensed SED technology to Canon in 1999. Nano-Proprietary says that the deal it signed with Canon doesn't extend to Toshiba. Rather than continue to fight the lawsuit and delay SED even further, Canon has now decided to buy out Toshiba's stake in SED Inc." Canon says that SED TVs will be delivered on time in Q4 of this year, but volume manufacturing (which Toshiba was supposed to handle) is being rethought.
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Your information is out of date. Modern plasma sets do not suffer from burn-in. I used to be paranoid about what I had on my TV, but now I realise that I do not have to worry.
I leave DVD menus on for hours (accidentally), play games, watch 4x3 shows galore, leave it paused for ages and there is no sign of any image retention. I have even left very bright setup menus from my PVR on overnight on several occasions. Every so often I put a few test images on sc
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I don't remember if I read on online or in a magazine. Sorry for no source.
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Re:Anyone seen one? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Anyone seen one? (Score:5, Informative)
http://gear.ign.com/articles/679/679235p1.html [ign.com]
Contrast ratios were 10,000:1 for the prototype and they claim it'll be 100,000:1 in the production version. And at a supposed 1 ms response time. Even if the contrast claim is off by a factor of 5, it's still way more than any display on the market today.
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Side-by-side showdown (Score:4, Informative)
Suitability for extended viewing (Score:1)
Jerks (Score:2, Interesting)
Usage of the word exploit (Score:3, Insightful)
But Toshiba will probably hate Cannon temporarily, especially with the "Canon had planned to exploit Toshiba for its 'mass-production technologies,'" remark.
Exploit is a transitive verb with two meanings/usages. "To make productive use of", and "to use unfairly to one's advantage."
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KFG
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Someone they'll now have to subcontract at a flat rate to handle the manufacturing instead of getting cut in on the deal.
Gee, I wonder who has that sort of capacity?
KFG
And the wait just gets longer... (Score:1)
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You bet. I bought a pair of 20" screens for home and a pair for work. Really good brand-name, too. Of the 4 LCDs, two had dead pixels. Of course, I had to prove that the number of dead pixels exceeded the threshold at which they'll accept a return, but the dark spot was pretty big. It would have been a huge distraction.
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On the other hand, you can get some really excellent deals on totally huge CRT's right now (like the 23 inch display I'm looking at right now
Interstesting (Score:4, Funny)
Actually... Even they are better then you think... (Score:3, Informative)
The color space I believe is 24 bit
Re:Actually... Even they are better then you think (Score:2)
Why would the power increase that much? Maybe I'm not understanding part of the technology, but I would think that the electron stream would remain constant if there was no change in the color through a pe
Re:Actually... Even they are better then you think (Score:1)
referenced bit depth is of 10 bits per channel [RGB]; 24 is silly number.
power usage is not per frame. other errors too drunk to continue.
clueless poster posting at length again. cheers.
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a colour space is mathematically defined (continuous, infinitely precise), defined for output-dependent (ie, component) standards by the chromaticity of the primaries. in other words, the ideal. the gamut is the radiometric limit from 0 to 100% intensity within that space. in other words, the real/measurable. the gamut can have concavities and even holes in it.
you could have a very accurate (to 4-bits) 4-bit display of sRGB or even Wide Gamut c
Grasping at straws... (Score:2)
Re:Grasping at straws... (Score:5, Funny)
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You could take that view of the story, but I always perk up my ears when I heard anything on this technology. I have been waiting for it to be commercialized for about 15 years. I saw this particularly story, though, a week or 2 ago, maybe longer.
Explains a lot (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Explains a lot (Score:4, Informative)
There is a new/old (started early 1970's) technology called FED (Field Emission Display) which is being developed by Sony and they already are demoing 26in and 30in versions at 1080p, although they do need to demo much larger ones to be taken seriously.
However FED like SED may not be acceptable if the overall costs are not significantly cheaper than LCD and Plasma. Still this technology may force further cuts in the flat panel market, which IMHO can only be good for the consumer. If you don't have a HDTV yet and are contemplating buying one, a six months wait may save you a considerable amount of money.
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I got one. It was considerably cheaper than the products six months earlier. It was considerably more expensive than the products six months later. Sorta reminds me of computers, there's always a better deal on the horizon. This one is still way off from being a mass produced alternative, and I wouldn't think this has any impact before 2008-2009.
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they already are demoing 26in and 30in versions at 1080p, although they do need to demo much larger ones to be taken seriously.
Depends what they're for. For computer monitors, the number of pixels in a small area is very important. I find a 23" display is big enough, but the difference between a 100dpi and a 200dpi display is staggering in terms of visual quality (particularly when reading text; you can say goodbye to hacks like sub-pixel AA). Unfortunately, the cost of a 200dpi TFT is about two orders of magnitude (base 10) more than the cost of a 100dpi one. Anyone who can sell a reasonably cheap 200dpi (or more) flat screen
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SED? (Score:2)
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I disagree. If you ponder the vast majority of 'content' delivered by the major networks to screens everywhere these days, Shit Emitting Diode is actually rather apropos.
Soko
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And I thought it was the old East German Communist Party [wikipedia.org] (Socialist Unity Party of Germany, or Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, or SED) and wondered why Canon and Toshiba would be interested in that...
I want one now but... (Score:3, Informative)
I'm too lazy to look for a link..
Well, Wikipedia should say something about it...
Yep!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface-conduction_e
Brinkmanship (Score:2, Insightful)
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LCD with LED backlight rocks (Score:3, Interesting)
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My (suddenly realised it's quite old, eight years now) Sony Wega Trinitron glass flat-tube TV is still going strong, so I'm not going to rush into replacing it just yet, until I know whether LCD+LED is coming, whether SED will actually turn up... and the whole issue of HDMI/HDCP/DVI is clarified, such as wehet
Legal Mumbo Jumbo (Score:5, Interesting)
Most important though, the complaint is (1) that Toshiba wasn't licensed and (2) that there is a breech of the agreement with Canon over "excluded products" (among a bunch of other stuff). That might mean that - Toshiba or not - Canon's not going to be free of the lawsuit, and not going to be releasing SED products either. Curiously, Nano's site doesn't mention any other licensees of their technology. So...one has to wonder if Toshiba and Canon together can't get these things to market and make them competitive, then who are they hoping to find that can do it?
Seems to me the best move would've been to let Canon/Toshiba take them to market and then go after all the competitors (Sony, Phillips, Hitachi, etc) for a license when they try to enter the market. But I guess that's why I don't own a multi-billion dollar electronics company.
Another problem (Score:1)
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SED Projector? (Score:1)
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The best idea I heard for projectors was a kind of CRT which lased in the direction of the electron beam. This meant it had continual focus, i.e. it was in focus at any distance. Some Russian guy I met about 10 years ago was talking about it but I don't know if it got anywhere. Something like http://www. [turpion.org]
I wonder how small they can get these... (Score:5, Interesting)
Add an SED to a laptop with solid-state storage (which, by the time this is feasible, will be at least where laptop hard drives are today), and the continuing work on processors that can shut themselves down nicely, and we may get some truly efficient laptops out of the deal, that only use power when actually doing something. Imagine instead of "suspending", just setting a "blank the screen" screensaver, and ending up with about the same power usage as a suspended laptop of today, only your torrent is still going...
A man can dream.
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As you can see, they're already very thin (the one on the second pic is about as thin as the LCD on my laptop [hp.com]) and from my understanding of how the technology works, individual pixels will be powered proportionally to the brightness needed, so b
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If the OLPC idea of charging your laptop with muscle power catches on, things might look different.
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It's just that if you're "in the know" and understand what's going on, you could choose a light-on-black display to save power. And with the improved contrast ratio, that might not be so bad.
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Your suggesting are inherently contradictory. If you're downloading a torrent, you can't power-down your CPU. Power management is getting better, but you'll never get near Suspend-level power usage with any CPU activity. Not to mention , when active, you need more power for accessing RAM. Your solid-state hard dri
Land of the lawyer (Score:2)
Hard problem (Score:1)
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Tragic... (Score:2)
SED's dead baby,...... (Score:2)
This can only mean bad or highly priced things for SED.
All I damn well want is exactly the same quality picture as my beautiful CRT's only larger and lighter, hell you can even keep the cost somewhat (reasonably) higher. I can't deal with Plasma or LCD the picture is just "washy" and nasty - really nasty even sometimes when I begin to weaken and think "hell maybe this isn't s
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Sadly, every CRT I've ever had has gone the wayside of getting blurry except for the trinitrons. And I've not purchased one larger than 17", so I don't want to go back to a 17 for daily use...
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You couldn't pay me to switch from crts.
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That is very large for CRTs. ViewSonic still sells CRT monitors, but only up to 21".
ViewSonic CRT Monitors [viewsonic.com]
The largest CRT that I could find from any manufacturer is only 22". I'm using a 19" monitor at home.
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ViewSonic began making monitors with Trinitron technology as soon as the patent expired. That used to be common knowledge, about 5 years ago. Here, they even name it:
"By incorporating the latest flat FD Trinitron® CRT, new fast performing video circuitry, and stringent quality processes during manufacturing, the Nokia FlatAG(TM) technology ensures the best poss
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Nano-P says lawsuit is still on: (Score:3, Informative)
"Restructuring of Canon's ownership position does not resolve the pending litigation which goes to trial in a few weeks," said Tom Bijou, Chief Executive Officer of Nano-Proprietary, Inc. "We have terminated Canon's license as a result of breach of contract. Moreover, our complaint against Canon includes other counts, including fraud unrelated to the ownership of SED. We are, however, willing to enter into a new license agreement with Canon on reasonable terms."
From all I have found, the fraud appears to be related to the inclusion of Toshiba without Nano-P knowledge, now that it is a wholly owned Canon venture that has yet to deliver a product, that seems rather scurrilous. It looks like an attempt to renegotiate (extort) for more money now that Canon is getting close to a real product. SED may wither on the vine if this keeps up. With years of development, I would be certain Canon has it's own IP portfolio that would pretty much eliminate anyone else going forward. This is already going to be in a niche product over the price point of most. Don't hold your breath on these. I am thinking Toshiba was happy to get out.