Sharp LCD Display with 1,000,000:1 Contrast Ratio 184
i4u writes "Sharp announces in Japan that it has developed a LCD display with the world's highest contrast ratio of 1,000,000:1.
The Sharp ASV Premium LCD display panel has a size of 37 inch, 1920x1080 pixel resolution and a brightness of 500cd/m2.
Sharp aims the Mega Contrast LCD display at the professional TV and movie production industry. For comparison the Canon and Toshiba developed SED TV has 100,000:1 contrast ratio."
Article (Score:5, Informative)
The Sharp ASV Premium LCD display panel has a size of 37 inch, 1920x1080 pixel resolution and a brightness of 500cd/m2.
Sharp aims the Mega Contrast LCD display at the professional TV and movie production industry. Message to Sharp: I also want a LCD display that works well in bright rooms. No word on when this new Sharp ASV Premium LCD displays will be available.
The highest contrast ratio we reported so far about was 100,000:1 reached by a SED TV developed by Canon and Toshiba.
More details in this Sharp press-release (Japanese).
110 words, the rest is ads. What an absolutely useless website.
Re:Black? (Score:4, Informative)
it has a brightness of 500cd/m2. still too light for me, but much better than 1000cd/m2 which are far more copmmon.
and by the way: original announcement [sharp-world.com]. Why They are posting links to such crap websites in the original story?
Still not good enough... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Contrast Ratio (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Contrast Ratio (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Contrast Ratio (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Contrast Ratio (Score:2, Informative)
Slightly more text (Score:2, Informative)
Useless specifications (Score:5, Informative)
Contrast ratio, brightness, and screen-performance information are generated by suing highly tailored test patterns and performance benchmarks that have little to do with the real image, but a lot to do with published specs.
For example, depending on how the technology responds, the contrast ratio test may consist of a white square, box, or dot on a black field, or a measured sequence of black-to-white screens, with the measured difference in brightness given as the contrast ratio.
The best analogy is speaker specs, which unless they are linked to recognized performance specifications (like frequency response given as plus/minus decibel variance from 20 to 20,000 Hz), are completely misleading. A speaker advertised as delivering 500 Watts may only be able to handle that much power as a transient, and even then a speaker can only "deliver" the power fed into it, which means you also need a 500-W amplifier.
A very good example was at the latest Society for Information Display (www.sid.org) show. Samsung had both the largest LCD and the largest Plasma in existence at the show, and although the brightness and contrast "specs" for the Plasma was greater, the LCD obviously had a brighter and sharper image in operation. True, the blacks were better in the Plasma, but that was the only visible distinction to the discerning viewer and only shows how little a guarantor of performance a high contrast rating is.
This news is certainly encouraging information, and will certainly result in a better-performing display appearing on our shelves soon. But to look at any given spec and shout "halleluia!" is being overly generous.
Re:Contrast Ratio (Score:2, Informative)
If it was as bright as the sun you would probably need a fusion reactor to power it!
Actually, a typical welding arc is brighter than the sun, and doesn't take nearly that much power. Now, to be as bright as the surface of the sun...
Re:Black? (Score:4, Informative)
500cd/m2 brightness is pretty nice for an LCD display - since most of the LCD display's on the market right now are 250cd/m2 - 300cd/m2. To get a brightness of 1000cd/m2 you are looking at a Plasma Display, which is useless as a computer monitor (too large generally, burn-in issues, and even higher-resolution Plasma displays make text look like shit).
So, 1000cd/m2 brightness it NOT common in LCD Displays currently.
Inaccurate Analysis (Score:5, Informative)
For example, Go into a brightly lit room and try to differentiate between 10 subtle shades of black. Or go into a dimly lit room and try to discern between 10 subtle shades of white.
Re:Contrast Ratio (Score:3, Informative)
But not for sensitivity.
The 1 million to one ratio has been beat by OLED screens that have an infinite Contrast ratio. But what folks need to know is there are are in fact 2 contrast ratios. Essentially you can call it dark and light room contrast. For Dark room, it's simple, maximum brightness/maximum darkness as measured in a photonics unit. . Usually you do it over 9 points on the screen and mix min brightness and min darkness for an average. When you look at manufacture's ads, this is the number you see. An LCD can be between 100 and 1000 in this number. The lost is because of LCD leakage, where the black isn't quite black and lets a small percent of light out.
Now the real number is the light room. And Nothing is that good in Light Room. If you shine a light on an screen, you will get a fair amount back. Most LCD screens drop a factor of 10 or more in CR. Very good LCDs have an effective CR of 10-100. It's easy enough to tell the difference between white and black even with a CR of around 2. But you can tell the difference between a CR of 2, 10 and 100 even untrained. So what happens is PR hacks put out the million number, which is even more meaningless as the common methodology has the instruments not able to detect beyond the 10,000 mark. The real number is always worse...
Re:Inaccurate Analysis (Score:3, Informative)
I've been using this display for two years and I love it to death but I must admit that the limited contrast ratio is the biggest drawback.
What Contrast Ratio Is (Score:3, Informative)