CES Scorecard 2007 - What Came True; What Didn't 80
narramissic writes "In the race for Consumer Electronics Show (CES) headlines, companies parade new, hot, and not-quite-ready-for-primetime products while keynote speakers rev things up with predictions for the year ahead. An ITworld article runs down the list of who stuck their necks out too far in 2007, starting with Sharp's monster 108-inch LCD. 'The set represented the biggest flat-panel TV developed -- a title it still holds today -- and came without a price but with the promise of availability during 2007. But wealthy consumers are still waiting. Sharp said recently that it is still working on plans for a commercial launch for the TV set.'"
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http://www.komatsuamerica.com/?p=equipment&f1=view&prdt_id=864 [komatsuamerica.com]
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Plasma sets are also having issues, suffer from burn-in, and are expensive.
I think LCD (either reflective or transmissive) is the best bet for
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As long as the DMD can last 5-6 years (which shouldn't be a problem), that's fine with me. My TV upgrade cycle is about that long, so what do I car
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Yeah, well you're weird! My TV is almost as old as I am, and I'll bet a large section of the market is probably more similar to me than you. (Of course, I'm admittedly not planning on getting a 108-inch LCD anytime soon either, so the point is somewhat moot.)
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I'm no TVplile either, no HD, Blu
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Well you see, I'm not that old -- I'm 23. ; ) The TV is from the late 80s/early 90s; it's a hand-me-down from my parents. Aside from having only coax input (no RCA or S-video, but it is "cable-ready"), it's not much different than any other cheap analog CRT you'd find these days at Wal-Mart and the like. Oh, and it's a whopping 19".
My parents have a 15" TV in their bedroom that's at least a deca
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You are making the (IMO crazy) assumption that most households only have one TV.
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But TVs aren't the real problem since the TV problem is easilly solved with set top boxes and sometimes ariel upgrades. VCRs and PVRs are a much bigger problem at least in my experiance they don't get on too well with set top boxes if you want to make timed recordings reliablly and they have only moved to integ
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For a given size, plasmas are cheaper than LCDs. Granted I got a good price, but my 58" plasma (the family holiday present) was $1900. Plasma is a power hog though; I think it is rated at over 600 watts.
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Consumer Reports did a survey of their members about flat screen TVs. 3% of the Plasma and LCD TVs needed some sort of repairs, while for DLP the number was 10%.
i guess it's more figurative. (Score:1, Funny)
The guy killed by the tiger at the SF zoo [chron.com] on December 27 didn't make the list?
Am I the only one? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Am I the only one? (Score:5, Funny)
You can't buy anything from Atom Chip (Score:2)
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HD format war (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually that would be nice, but I don't see the movie industry being too keen on that happening, and Sony will never give up on pushing a proprietary media format that they can monopolize.
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http://www.electronista.com/articles/07/12/26/panasonic.150.inch.tv.soon/ [electronista.com]
Re:HD format war (Score:4, Funny)
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And I'm mighty proud to say,
Now I can watch "The Simpsons" from thirty blocks away.
Yep, that was the first thing I thought of, too.
Chris Mattern
Hollywood feels a large disturbance in the force. (Score:3, Funny)
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At that size... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Hello?? Like that would work, a projector placed on the ceiling of a hummer..
*sigh*
some people truly have no idea of the problems some of us face
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I have a 70", 178cm JVC hdtv and it's far better then any projector i've seen.
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Works great in my well lit house with the windows. I haven't seen many TVs that compare to my HDTV projector at 120" +
But to each their own. Anything over 50" is great for splitscreen on video games. Keeps me very happy.
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You haven't seen a good projector then.
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Re:At that size... (Score:4, Informative)
I can ship a high end projector and screen for peanuts. a 108" monster plasma or LCD will cost me nearly $500.00 in truck freight and another $500.00 in insurance. I get so many 58" or 64" set's delivered broken it's not funny, the larger they get the more they arrive broken (glass broken from shipping)
Also the rich people are not interested in the 108. Most want the 50" a few will buy the 58" when we spec it in the package deal at only $100.00 more and very few want the 64 as it's too damned big. Even mounted at 6 feet high over the fireplace in a gigantic parlor room it's too big. a 50" looks better and fits most decor better.
the 108 will not be common as it's too damned big to ship, too damned big to deliver, and will require a team of 4 or more to hang it on the wall. and dont even think of putting it on a tilt bracket!
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Of course, to actually make use of a HD projector I also need to re-arrange a room, get better curtains, install a screen, buy one piece of new furniture, upgrade my amp to (at least) 5.1, buy a sub-woofer, re-cable some stu
In recent news, Sony to avoid projector HDTV (Score:1)
It's amazing how gullible the electronics press was, in believing that bigger is always better.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to fire up the generator for my personal computer that takes up my entire basement
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Actually if you have the room an older rear projection HDTV is better. I got a 50" rca scenium on clearance new in a box for $399.99 because the sheeple wont buy them anymore. Granted non projector based are quieter for the "i barely want the volume up" crowd but I like it cranking so I dont hear the fans or colorwheel.
And with everyone being fed the 1080p marketing BS everyone is shying away from the 720p sets giving lots of bargians out there. We are buying 37" olevia sets for $200.00 each from a loca
What's the point here? (Score:2, Informative)
I've seen a lot of LCD TVs on sale and display at various stores. The one thing they all have in common is they all look like crap. These aren't just the cheap TVs. I'm talking about multi-thousand-dollar models that just look horrible.
Perhaps "crap" isn't an objective term. They look grainy, have flicker, pixelation, and cost a fortune.
I saw an ad for one recently that was very proud of its "10-bit engine" capable of 1080 lines! Wow! Correct me if I'm wrong (like I have to ask
Re:What's the point here? (Score:5, Interesting)
#2 1080p = 1920x1080, 1080 is the vertical resolution, not the horizontal. Also 108" is for people who want to sit 10' or more away from their TV, I doubt they'd sit at 2' away like you would on a computer monitor...
I suggest you document yourself a bit more on things before thinking that HD is all hype or marketing.
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Still, the idea of quadrupling the resolution (540i vs 1080p) then increasing the size of the TV by 10x means that the picture will be more grainy - especially when they say you have to sit further away to get the "full viewing experience".
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Is that the point that you are trying to make? It sure seems like it. I'll take my HDTV TYVM!
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I agree with you on the idea of having a 100"+ TV is pretty dumbfounded... I think 50"-56" should be the max available. (other than the theater/IMAX)
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Because most of us probably couldn't afford a 108" display, and probably wouldn't have anywhere to put it!
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.
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What, like that dude who got his DNA mapped?
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Now, I could of course get back 10' so I won't see it anymore, but why bother buying a 108" TV then instead of simply buying a normal one and get closer?
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Know what that sounds like? A poor person justifying to themself why they don't need a fancy big TV anyway.
In fact, why bother with a regular sized TV at all when you can get one of those portable 2" TVs and a magnifying glass.
I'm sure somewhere there's a filthy rich guy with a TV room larger than my apartment who simply can't imagine buying a TV less than 100".
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No, these probably won't end up in the average person's home, but there IS a small niche market for displays this large.
Of course it looks awful. It's the DRM. (Score:2)
#1 hdtvs in stores (and sometimes in people's houses) OFTEN are displaying SD material,
Of course. The DRM system, HDCP, won't let you run multiple monitors from the same protected source. The player and monitor do a cryptographic key exchange to authenticate the monitor, then exchange session keys. So each player-to-monitor session has a unique key. You can't just split the output.
There are multiple-output HDCP-compliant splitters. [sewelldirect.com], and they're not cheap. $750 for a 5-output unit is typical. These
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Um, no, that's the same picture you'll get on your 1728 x 1080 monitor, but blown up to be 108 inches.
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You're wrong. You seem to be confusing lines and columns.
1080 lines would be (Something) x 1080. In the case of HDTV, 1920 x 1080, which is better than the majority of monitors.
Besides, monitors and TVs aren't a particularly good comparison. You aren't going to be reading tiny, fine text
When did you go? (Score:2)
I just went to Best Buy today and was impressed with how far LCD TVs have come. Some of them looked better than some quality DLP TVs. That was just my opinion, I'm not trying to talk anyone into getting a TV but I love my 50" LCD projection TV that is only 720p. I have to get pretty close before I notice pixelization.
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I think the main reason people buy the LCDs is mostly because of the cool factor, but they also have the advantage of being a lot smaller and less heavy.
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LCD displays? Hell of a lot easier to move around and position.
As for the OLEDs... (Score:2)
¥200,000 is no amazing price for a small scale release with frontier technology... It's around $1,750...
What they didn't mention in the article... (Score:2)
http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=202103858 [informationweek.com]
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This is all very well... (Score:2)
Tony.
Refreshing (Score:1)
Who pays these people? That's right, if it has any kind of tech buzzword it gets published, bought, invested in, fawned over and masturbated on.
Man, reminds of about 10 years ago...
DVORAK!!!!