Thin CRTs to Challenge LCDs in 2005 472
bigtangringo writes "First Samsung and now LG.Phillips have worked out a way to create thin CRT displays. Thin CRTs offer the best of both worlds -- superior picture quality with a slim size. Thin CRTs are expected to be more expensive than current CRTs, however they are also expected to drop in price rapidly. Both companies plan on releasing Thin CRTs in late 2005."
Perfect Example..... (Score:5, Funny)
At this rate of technological development, I'm just wondering when Moore's law will be replaced by Murphy's.
Re:Perfect Example..... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Perfect Example..... (Score:2)
I, for one, have enjoyed running multi-monitor systems, when I had the spare, old hardware laying around, but for $400, I expect about a 21" monitor, probably with speakers. Props to the capitalists dropping a '0' behind that figure, and getting it.
Display technology seems priced like beverages at your favorite death-burger counter.
Re:Perfect Example..... (Score:3, Informative)
Radiation and power use (Score:2)
Don't feel bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Eyes (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Informative)
Just to add to this. While the parent is correct, that a LCD is usually going to be better on your eye's, a good quality crt will also allow just as many hours of use with no eye strain.
I find with a cheaper CRT I get headaches after a couple of hours of work. However I purchased an Iiyama visionmaster pro 455 [iiyama.com] and I can literally spend days working on it with no noticable eye strain. It is also brighter and clearer than pretty much any LCD I've seen. So in the end, if you pay a decent amount for a monitor it should be fine.
All the same, unless you plan on playing games on the machine, I'd suggest going for an LCD.
Re:Eyes (Score:2)
And in case you think it might be related to age, my younge
Re:Eyes (Score:4, Interesting)
5 years ago 75 was considered the norm even with expencive crt's. I personally don't like to use a CRT unless its running at 100.
I'd assume the thin crt's have the same drawbacks as the old ones since they will still refresh in a similar way and thus have the flicker. Of course that is assuming the flicker is what causes the eye strain (AFAIK it is).
Also, I've been sitting in front of CRT monitors for far to many hours a day for the last 14 years and I still have 20/20 vision. At work I moved over to LCD last year, though I have noticed no difference in how my eyes feel at the end of the day, so its really only desk space that I gain.
I guess its one of those things that varies a lot from person to person.
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Insightful)
Some people like yourself prefer 100+, some are fine with 60 Hz. It varies completely.
On the other hand, my new 17" TFT runs at 60 Hz and hasn't caused any problems because they don't flicker. I suggest them for games too, since the newer ones have very good response times and no visible ghosting (although, again, it depends who you are as some people notice it more than others). My only advice: don't dual screen a CRT and a TFT with different refresh rates, it seems to mess your eyes up if you focus on both
Re:Eyes (Score:3, Informative)
Re:CRT bandwidth test (Score:3, Informative)
other image when you rotate your head. You don't.
In a CRT, there is a grid of holes or slots that
masks the colored phosphors. Each pixel projected
onto the screen will hit a good number of these
holes or slots. It's not even an integer number.
The beam is in no way aligned to the mask, and it
is not even sharply defined. (it's Gaussian)
Suppose we measure pixel size in terms of the
number of holes or slots that the pixel fall on,
and we find that 3 pixels span 1
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Informative)
Here are some generalized tips for monitor placement, lighting, and eye health:
http://www.crazycolour.com/os/ergonomics
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Interesting)
The only devices I know of with those types of displays are Pocket PCs.
I've always assumed that regular LCDs still were better than CRT because at least you don't have an electron gun deluging your face with radiation.
Dan East
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Eyes (Score:3, Informative)
Reflective LCD doesn't mean that it reflects everything around you, or that there is any glare, it just bounces ambiant light back through the panel to improve brightness. This also has the effect of making them good outdoors in sunlight.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Eyes (Score:4, Insightful)
Um, a paper reflects light. Thats how you see it. So does mostly everything else in your surroundings, except for the minority of objects which emit light. Lamps and screens, mostly.
By your logic, a paper should be harder to read than a screen. Is it?
Re:Eyes (Score:3, Insightful)
Depends. Is there any light source in the room? If not, then a screen will be easier to read. If the room is brightly lit, a paper should be easier to read. Of course, trying to decide whether a screen is better than paper is like trying to decide if technical whitepapers are better than novels. It totally depends on your environment, needs, and other variables. I don't think there's much point to the whole 'paper v. screens' debate.
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Funny)
Gosh. Do the photons come with little tags that say "organically grown"?
Re:Eyes (Score:4, Informative)
1) Modern CRT monitors produce a negligible amount of radiation.
2) Almost all of that radiation actually goes away from the back of the monitor in the opposite direction to you.
3) All displays emit a form of electro-magnetic radiation called "light". That's how you see objects on the screen.
Answering mfh's question, it's best to use an expensive LCD display. Test it before, a lot depends on the way your personal eyes work - different people would prefer different monitors. And make 5-minute breaks every hour. You can use these breaks to visit a toilet, eat a serving of fresh fruits or drink a glass of water. All these things (if done regularly) do wonders to your health. And don't forget about carpal tunnel syndrome and haemorrhoids.
Re:Eyes (Score:2)
Re:Eyes (Score:2)
I find the el-cheapo flouresent lights in the office do more damage to people than a high quality CRT does.
Ganja (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ganja -- It's True! (Score:2, Funny)
This man knows what he's talking about. I've been smoking weed since forever, and I'm glaucoma-free!
Yes- I do know (Score:4, Informative)
CRTs generally deliver the Lmin (lowest brightness level) and an almost good enough Lmax (Colour CRTs don't hit the high range, unfortunately).
Basically no numbers because I'm not sure what's proprietary, but I'd tell you to choose CRTs hands down.
The LCD model that pretyt much every cheap LCD follows is innapropriate for large hours in front of the screen. The impulse that describes how the light appears to your eyes isn't the way your brain is designed to view things- the image doesn't 'decay'.
So if you light the wall behind your computer evenly with about, say, 2x15 watt bulbs from about 10 feet off, that should be sufficient illumination (note the rest of the room is dark) to keep your eyes in a 'relaxed' state. Your monitor should be out of cutoff (deep blacks) so that your eyes stay adjusted to the whole range. The bezel itself could be painted grey, but that isn't critical.
Help any?
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Interesting)
If you accurately measure the luminance from one spot on a CRT screen at sufficiently high time resolution, it looks like a regular series of big spikes followed by exponential decay as the electron beam passes by during each vertical sweep. If the beam passes by sufficiently frequently, our visual system temporally smooths this uneven luminance into what we percieve as a solid image through an effect that's called flicker fusion. Most humans have a flicker fusion rate at about 30 Hz, but there's a broad distribution from individual to individual, and the transition between seeing something that flashes and something that's solid isn't abrupt (further, it depends on contrast ratio, which part of the retina, and a host of other things). But, this is why, in general, CRTs tend to appear to flicker when the refresh rate is at 60 Hz, but not so at 85 Hz or above.
When we record the response of individual neurons in the early visual system, the entrainment of activity to the vertical refresh is striking, and has been found even in higher order visual areas (well beyond the primary visual cortex) at refresh rates as high as 135 Hz with CRTs. In my work, I routinely see responses to 90 Hz flicker in the visual thalamus.
If you examine the luminance from an LCD in the same way, instead of big spikes followed by exponential decay, you see staircases as pixels changes from one luminance to the next through the presentation of whatever is on the display. Recording from early visual neurons in the same circumstances shows a vastly different response characteristic than for the same visual presentation made via CRT (as accurately as we can match it).
This physiological result jibes well with my personal experience that a 60 Hz refresh rate on a CRT is just this side of torture, and while 85 Hz appears solid, 100 Hz has a subtle *more* solid and more pleasant aspect to it. And, further, that any current LCD blows away even an ultra-fast CRT (we use 180 Hz at the upper end) in terms of image stability.
Bottom line: the scientific evidence suggests that unless you want your visual system to be pulsing at CRT refresh rates, get an LCD display.
Re:Eyes (Score:3, Interesting)
First, is it *bad* for our visual system to be pulsing at CRT refresh rates? What does that do to the body, both good and bad?
Second, how does the impact of a flickering CRT compare with that of the fluorescent lights already found in many homes and businesses? Will replacing a CRT with an LCD make any significant difference if the room you're in is already lit with fluorescent lighting?
Thanks again for the excellent post, and for looking at these fol
Re:Eyes (Score:5, Informative)
Personally, I find that my eyes spend more time trying to microaccommodate (focus) on CRT screens than on LCDs.
Excellent question on fluorescent lighting. It turns out that fluorescent lighting isn't nearly as aggressive as CRT illumination in terms of being pulsed. There are three reasons for this, first fluorescent bulbs -- and we're talking about the classic long tubes, not the newer compact fluorescents which are completely different -- are driven by a sinusoidal current rather than an impulse like the CRT electron beam, so that the pulsation is of lower magnitude. Second, the phosphor on fluorescent bulbs is much slower than that used for CRTs, to help filter out even more of the pulsation. Third, fluorescent bulbs have an effective refresh rate of 120 Hz (both half cycles of the 60 Hz sinusoid activate the phosphor). However, not all fluorescent phosphors are made equal, and in countries where AC power is 50 Hz, you can often see the flicker.
So, to return to the question at hand, will using an LCD monitor make a difference given that you have fluorescent lighting in your environment? Yes, but not as much as if the lighting were incandescent. Is it still worth doing? I'd say so.
What do I personally do? (Does the dentist actually chew Trident?) I use 5 screens total in my professional and personal life, three are LCDs, and two are CRTs running at 85 Hz (this is discounting the screens used for experimentation). The illumination at work is stock institutional fluorescent bulbs which would be full-spectrum if the physical plant staff didn't automatically change them every N months, and at home there's a mix of full-spectrum compact fluorescent (which don't pulse at anything close to a perceptually relevant frequency) and incandescent. I much prefer the LCDs to the CRTs.
Re:Eyes (Score:3, Informative)
1) The screen doesn't flash at you. Take quickly exposed picture of your monitor and an LCD to see the effect. CRT's give a lot of people headaches.
2) LCD's aren't blurry at all.
3) LCD's don't use radiation and high voltage.
Other benefits:
45 Watts on my 19 inch. (Doesn't make a lot of heat either)
Doesn't bend my desk over the years.
Wall mountable.
More desk space.
Won't zap you with static electricity.
Perfectly flat.
Non-glare by nature (plastic, not glass).
I could go on probably forever
Re:Eyes (Score:2)
Better refresh, well, apart from the fact that the 2 types of screen refresh differently so its a bit oranges-and-apples here, modern CRTs will refresh at stupidly quick refresh rates (200Hz?!). LCDs on the other hand have to be careful with their refresh rates - 16ms is good, 25ms is the older, slower type where you will see 'motion blur' type effects occasionally.
As for your sties, try blinking occasionally.
Well (Score:4, Insightful)
E.g Refresh Rate issues, Pollution, Power Usage.
Still.. a smaller 24" widescreen would be nice, since this Compaq weights around 44 pounds.
Re:Well (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Well (Score:3, Insightful)
CRTs have better refresh rates than LCDs.
So what? You can run an LCD at 10Hz, and it will look just fine and not cause eyestrain. You may not have much luck playing Unreal at 10Hz, but then most of us don't make a living from playing Unreal.
Another thing going for the CRTs is that they can provide true collor every time while LCDs can only aproximate it.
CRTs have a different (and somewhat
Re:Well (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, but "refresh rate" has completely different implications CRT's and LCD's. The CRT recreates its entire display at its refresh rate: every pixel on a 75Hz screen *blinks* at 75Hz. Blinking at low ratees can result in significant eye strain.
The refresh rate for an LCD is simply how often it can change a pixel. LCD displays don't blink (well, unless you tell them to).
Using
Not exactly flat (Score:5, Insightful)
Still pretty heavy (Score:4, Interesting)
"Super-Slim" (Score:4, Informative)
Bugger me with a fish fork! That weighs as much as I do!
Re:"Super-Slim" (Score:2, Funny)
Super-slim compared to Michael Moore. :-D (Score:5, Informative)
So it's "super-slim" compared to a current huge, "fat" CRT but is a real porker compared to an LCD or Plasma screen.
How does this work? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How does this work? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How does this work? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The technology (Score:2)
i know what he means, what do YOU mean? (Score:2)
Wide Screen Format?? (Score:2)
thin? (Score:5, Informative)
YMMV, obviously.
(from TFA: "A 30-inch-tube television from Samsung Electronics will be about 16 inches thick, deeper than a flat panel set but about the same size as the typical stand on a flat-panel television, a Samsung executive said.")
Re:thin? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:thin? (Score:2, Informative)
Wow; lose 6" (27%) and suddenly its "ultra-thin"? I think not.
BTW: they're televisions, not monitors people. And it didn't say HDTV either, so just the NTSC/PAL resolution, making it even LESS impressive.
Re:thin? (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually the loss in depth is from the CRT part. The electronics associated with it will determine the use of the thing (computer monitor, HDTV, regular TV, paper weight)
Clive Sinclair did it first (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Clive Sinclair did it first (Score:2)
"20% reduction" in power consumption = not bad. (Score:5, Informative)
Thin CRTs offer the best of both worlds -- superior picture quality with a slim size.
Of course, one of the other bonuses of LCD screens is their low power consumption [howstuffworks.com]. Good for the electricity bill, and for Mother Nature.
At a 20% reduction, that comes out to between 80-90W, compared to 30-40W for LCDs.
Re:"20% reduction" in power consumption = not bad. (Score:5, Informative)
I just looked at the back of the DELL 19" LCD sitting at the reception desk and it uses 22.8Watts
any LCD that uses 30-40 watts is horribly inefficient.
Re:"20% reduction" in power consumption = not bad. (Score:2)
110 - 40 = 70W saving!
70W * 3120 hours (per year) = 218,000 Wh = 218kWh
My domestic electricity supplier charges about 5 pence per kWh.
218kWh * 0.05 = £11.
So, each year, each monitor you replace will reduce your company's leccy bill by £11. Each! Congratulations, the Earth is saved!
Remind me how much the difference in cost is between CRTs and LCDs of a similar size?
(I'm kidding really. G
Power utilization... (Score:3, Interesting)
How's about a little thinking.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I want one! (Score:4, Funny)
Viva la Valve, Long libe the Vacuum Tube! (Score:5, Interesting)
"CRTs are not going away anytime soon," said Riddhi Patel, an analyst with researcher iSuppli. "They will account for 70 percent of the market in 2008."
I wonder if these employ thermionic emmission, electrons hopping off sharp points, or ???
Any
I am curious because there may be life left in the CRT rebuilding industry.
I worked in CRT rebuilding plant one winter while in High School. Excepting myself, a high school friend, and an old half blind splotchy looking guy (he ran the hydroflouric acid etching machine) we were the only people who didn't run for the warehouse and hide in boxes whenever the INS appeared.
Dangerous work. Closest I've ever come to immolation. Thank you to whoever invented the dry chemical fire extinguisher!
More Info (Score:2)
Electrons hoping off sharp points = Field Emmission Displays.
Paper from 99 on carbon nanotube FED [msu.edu]
Additional FED links:
http://www.physorg.com/news86.html [physorg.com]
An important factor in commercialization is the price of raw materials. A number of Japanese companies including Mitsui, Toray Industries and Mitsubishi Chemical have well advanced plans to mass-produce CNTs and bring prices down to ¥10 000 (85)/kg. [com.com]
And a mess more interesting stuff on the carbon nanotube field emmission display via google search. [google.com]
Re:Viva la Valve, Long libe the Vacuum Tube! (Score:3, Informative)
On a side note, the 'short' CRT is interesting in that a thinner tube means that you can get away with a lower acceleration potential, which is probably why they're rated as mor
Priceless (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Priceless (Score:3, Funny)
If I wasn't blind from glaucoma [bbc.co.uk], I'd offer a pithy rebut to your slander against the CRT!
/. is Missing the Point (Score:5, Insightful)
The 32in is estimated to be $1000 retail and is ACTUALLY 1080i, not like the 'take 1080 and make 720" game that Plasma monitors play.
Sure, as COMPUTER monitors it ain't all that great, but these have signifigant advantges over Plasma and LCD in the living room.
It's too bad nothing supports 720P. (Score:2)
1080i != 540p (Score:3, Insightful)
Weighed in the Balance... (Score:5, Interesting)
Going hand in hand with this, I really like the concept of wall mounting, something even these "thin" CRTs wouldn't be capable of.
Power? (Score:2, Insightful)
[OT] Re:Power? (Score:3, Insightful)
SED - the new 'killer app' in TV and monitors? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:SED - the new 'killer app' in TV and monitors? (Score:4, Informative)
SED displays are CRTs, after a fashion. They have electron guns that fire modulated electron beams through a vacuum at phosphor screens. As such, they have the brightness, color purity, and response rate of regular CRTs. What is different is that there is an electron gun for every pixel, instead of just one that is scanned across the screen. This allows the screen to be flat and shallow, and gives the geometric flatness and sharpness usually associated with LCDs.
This was attempted before with a slightly different technology, and went by the acronym/buzzword FED, for Field Effect Display. As this article [spie.org] points out, there was tremendous anticipation of this technology quite some time ago, they were planning to go into production in 1996. FED's had an array of tiny, very sharp needles behind the phosphor screen. Unfortunately, the production and maintenance of this array of needles proved to be next to impossible.
SED's use a much more producable and durable semiconductor array of electron guns. The technology of creating large, dense arrays of semiconductors on substrates has been developed and perfected by the LCD process, so I feel that there is hope this time around that the machines will actually be mass-produced on the aggressive schedule that Canon and Toshiba have laid out.
The first generation of SED's, it is claimed, will unfortunately not have the resolution that would make them good for computer displays or home TV's, as the spacing of the pixels will be somewhat large. They'll be used for business displays of various kinds. But, in the not-too-distant future (three-to-five years) Canon and Toshiba predict that SED's will come to dominate TV and monitor production.
We'll see.
Thad Beier
Best of both worlds? (Score:5, Informative)
a roughly 20% reduction in depth, and a 10% reduction in weight. (mass, weight, whatever, I didn't do so well in Physics).
100mm is less than 4 inches. It's still 417mm deep -- that's over 16 inches... and 44kg? That's almost 100lbs.
So, the great break through is that you won't have to punch out the back of whatever cabinet you're trying to put the TV into. You'll still need help moving it so you don't throw your back out, and still need some sort of cabinet to put it in, as it's not light enough to be directly wall mounted without some reinforcing first.
I'm not saying this isn't a improvement, but it's not any real breakthrough -- things have been getting smaller for years. They'll continue to get smaller.
LCD's blacks (Score:3, Informative)
There is no challenge here. (Score:2, Insightful)
VERY easy on the eyes (CRTs be damned); 16ms response time; 35w power-consumption; excellent colour; 4 year manufacturer's warranty.
I don't know how life is where you are, but I find that electricity is becoming quite expensive. And I don't want a CRT firing at my face from less than 0.5m away.
Re:There is no challenge here. - I Challenge Thee! (Score:3, Funny)
Incandescent light bulbs don't create X-rays.
Re:There is no challenge here. - I Challenge Thee! (Score:3, Informative)
You are, of course, correct. The light bulb doesn't create X-Rays, and a CRT does.
But...
The X-rays generated by a CRT do not come hurtling towards your face. They are emitted on the same plane as the surface of the display area. They don't get too far, because there is shielding inside the monitor's enclosure. If you disassemble your monitor, and look at the SIDE of the CRT (in a way that you would not be able to actually VIEW the contents of the display) for lo
Strength of the envelope? (Score:2)
It looks as if that 30-inch tube has a flat screen and a 16:9 aspect ratio. That would make it about 26x15 inches = a bit shy of 400 square inches, at 15 pounds per square inch = 6000 pounds. Can you imagine a 26x15 inch flat sheet of glass supporting the weight of a small SUV, even if it is well supported all around its edge?
Is that
Candescent (Score:5, Informative)
This seems to be Candescent Technologies flatCRT (Score:5, Interesting)
Thank Fuck (Score:5, Insightful)
But while that's the case, having desk space isn't nearly as valuable to me as not having my eyes flayed by an LCD scratching them for 9 hours a day, thus, I stick with CRTs. I value my space -- but not that much. I value my eyes more.
I was hoping that the industry wouldn't give up on the tube and figure out a way to get the best of both worlds, and hopefully this is it. I assume we're not losing other things, such as dot pitch and refresh rate, with this invention, so it should be a win-win situation.
I dunno. I assume there are people out there using an LCD panel for long hours of staring and don't feel the same effects. That being said, I know people who don't think monitors running at 60Hz flicker (esp. when coupled with floro lights). I suppose it's all in the eye of the beholder (yuk,yuk).
Re:Thank Fuck (Score:3, Interesting)
So, some people do much better with CRT's, some with LCD's. Glad to have both!
Re:picture quality (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:picture quality (Score:3, Informative)
Re:picture quality (Score:5, Informative)
Colour reproduction.
Viewable angle.
Brightness
Contrast
Difficulty to knock over
Re:picture quality (Score:2)
Not a problem for 99% of the population
"Colour reproduction"
ditto
"Viewable angle"
ditto
"Brightness"
You're kidding, right?
"Contrast"
Maybe...
I know that intense gamers and some professional web designers have specific requirements for CRTs, but I bought my first TFT-based laptop in 1997 and after that I couldn't throw my CRTs away fast enough. I still own a CRT television, but I'm about to fix that.
A.
(who aims to be CRT-free by 2005)
Re:picture quality (Score:3, Insightful)
I used to think the same thing, being very happy with my LCD. I saw the comments from "graphics professionals", and wrote them off as typically overly-futzy artist-types.
Then I bought a digital SLR.
Snapshots, ok fine. But trying to work with low-contrast images or to try to prepare anything for printing, it became a frustrating guessing-game with a low success rate.
I love my LCD, but it is far from ideal for working on photos.
Re:picture quality (Score:3, Informative)
Re:picture quality (Score:2)
2560x1600, 30" (Score:3, Informative)
Black is black, color is accurate, pixels are sharp, and video bandwidth is not a problem.
Your CRT has massive problems displaying fine vertical lines. Try test [uml.edu] to see just how bad your CRT is.
Re:LOL, depends what you mean by thin... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:LOL, depends what you mean by thin... (Score:3, Informative)
Price. Try to find a decent looking (720p or 1080i) plasma for less than $2000. Samsung is targeting a ~$1k pricepoint on these new thin(er) CRT sets. LCD Tvs of comparaple size are even pricier.
Lifespan. If I'm going to drop $1-2K on a TV, I want the damn thing to last 1
Re:LOL, depends what you mean by thin... (Score:2)
Wont you agree?
Re:Picture quality? (Score:2)
Re:Game play (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wha? (Score:2)
Re:Wha? (Score:2)
That said, yes, LCDs might be better for some uses, but they have so many disadvantages that I still wouldn't exchange them against my good old CRT.
Re:Wha? (Score:2)
Re:Superior Picture Quality - LOL (Score:3, Informative)