New Larger TVs Favor LCD Over Plasma 211
Information Week is carrying a Reuters story examining the shift towards LCD technology in recent large-screen television models. Though some analysts acknowledge that plasma displays have faster response times over large surfaces, the industry seems to be betting that consumers will prefer higher resolution images over time. From the article: "CPT's Wu agrees that plasma panels, especially 50-inch and larger ones, do excel LCDs in some aspects of picture quality, but he says the sheer size of the LCD camp will help LCD panels overcome whatever drawbacks they have in a timely manner ...With the 40-inch-class market gradually taken over by LCD TVs, plasma models need to migrate to the market for 50-inch TVs and above, but demand is not as well developed there, analysts say. 'The United States accounts for more than 70 percent of demand for 50-inch plasma TVs and larger. In other words, there is virtually no 50-inch-class plasma TV market outside the United States,' DisplaySearch director Hisakazu Torii said."
Energy efficiency (Score:5, Informative)
Household equipment is rated in the shops on an energy efficiency scale, and LCD screens score much better than plasma.
Furthermore, plasma has a tendency to burn in. Of course every manufacturer and salesman will tell you that "this is no longer true", but once the problem has happened they are not so firm in their statements anymore.
This causes trouble when watching 4:3 transmissions in true 4:3 format (rather than stretched to 16:9).
It also sometimes causes station logos or newstickers to burn in.
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Manufacturers such as Panasonic claim that under normal conditions consumption is about the same. I simply don't know. But I suppose plasma's figures could look unfairly bad if consumption figures are calculated while the TVs are displaying a bright standard test pattern or set of colour bars
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I would be VERY surprised if anyone already has burn-in from playing games on a Wii.
Lots of different games wouldn't cause any burn-in. Playing the SAME game on a dedicated "gaming" plasma for many months on end would be a whole different story.
Re:Energy efficiency (Score:4, Informative)
The reason LCDs are outselling plasma displays is mainly that they are sold in brightly lit stores, where you won't easily see the enormous difference in contrast ratio. On the contrary, LCDs are fabricated to look black in direct lighting, while plasmas sometimes tend to look greyish.
Good stores should have dampened lighting in the TV dept. Plasmas are like projectors, you don't really see what they are capable of in bright light. Turn the lights down on an LCD, and you will see the disastrously poor contrast of LCD technology manifesting itself as glaring, grey areas that are supposed to represent black.
The other reason is that LCD are preadjusted to do a lot of clipping in white and black areas (which people don't always easily react to) to make the picture look less washed-out. If you correctly calibrate an LCD you will see this limitation quickly.
To further fool the customers, LCD vendors have a fantast-number called "dynamic contrast", which represents total contrast after frame-by-frame contrast distribution. It would be OK giving ut this specification, had they not omitted the real number. After all, "dynamic contrast 8000:1!" doesn't sound less cool than "contrast 5000:1". It's dynamic, like Batman & Robin. Too bad the real contrast is 1200:1.
So sure, LCDs may be better for use with a computer, but that is not the reason why they are winning the battles in the elecronics stores.
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It doesn't mean that's the best environment to replicate the movie theatre exp
LCD's energy efficiency is a myth! (Score:2)
While LCDs use nearly the same amount of energy regardless of the picture, the plasmas energy uses climbs with the brightness of the content. LCD uses background lighting and the LC filter out light/colours. 200 watts if the picture is white, 200 watts if the picture is black. Plasmas "create" light and a plasma uses much more energy wh
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Hell, top menu bar on my 6-month old iMac has burned in.
It's not NEARLY as bad on LCDs as it is on most plasmas, but it's still there on almost every single LCD.
Memory (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Memory (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Memory (Score:5, Interesting)
I get burn in on my Plasma (a 50") after watching BBC News 24 (which has a large bright red box with the news logo and time on it in one corner) or when leaving my PVR menu on screen for a few minutes or leaving it outputting my Mac Mini desktop for some time (the bright icons in the Dock tend to burn in). As per the manual, if I watch another channel - particularly something bright - it goes away quickly. How quickly it goes away depends how long it was displaying the image (I think that's actually stated in my manual too).
Plasma does seem much more susceptible to "burn in"/persistence than LCD, but for the moment Plasma displays are the only way to go if you are looking for a large set (because you simply can't by very large LCD's). Plasma sets are also typically quite a bit cheaper, which makes them attractive. Lastly, they are also brighter than both back projection displays and LCD displays - my Pioneer Plasma is brighter than my old 1,500 UKP Sony CRT! Plasma sets seem to be the only ones that are able to deliver a bright picture, even with bright direct sunlight bouncing right off them (not a major selling point perhaps, but I was impressed).
I completely expect LCD displays to ultimately take over from Plasma's though. They are (potentially) a fair bit sharper, and they don't generate nearly as much heat - having the Plasma TV on is quite literally like having a radiator on in the room - particularly if it's a bright image, it gets as hot as the bottom of my PowerBook G4. It's just a matter of time before they can be made cost effectively at large sizes with little to no defects. If I was looking for a second (smaller) display I would definitely consider an LCD as it is. That said, I still expect Plasma TV's will be around and selling well for another 5 years yet (not least because it's much better than back projection and it's still kicking around).
I'm not surprised the US is the only real market for large displays. Not only do people have larger houses in the US (than say in Europe or in Asia) - you shouldn't really go bigger than about 42" unless you have a decent sized room -, and have more disposable income (due to lower taxation) but things like electronic goods are just so much cheaper (down to due to a combination of low taxation and economy of scale, I assume).
e.g. The cheapest price for my 50" Pioneer Plasma on Froogle (or indeed anywhere else) in the UK was ~3,500 UKP (with near identical pricing in stores on the continent). It a bit more expensive than most, as it's noticeably above average in terms of picture quality. At current exchange rates, that's over 6600 USD. When searching US stores in Froogle it was not only less than 3,500 US Dollars it was more like 2,000-2,800 (just under 1,500 UKP). Definitely worth a weekend trip to NYC if you are looking for something similarly expensive (but more portable
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That line of Philips TVs is awesome. I have a 32PF9986. This is the predecessor of the 9831 line (with a little less connectivity). I have it for about two years now, and at the time it was in a league of its own compared to all other LCD sets. It still it better than most of them.
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That's not really comparable to a plasma TV since you're talking about an LCD projection TV, not an LCD flat panel. A fair comparison is that a 60" plasma is about $7K while a 65" flat panel LCD (couldn't find any 60") is about $8.5K. Back on the greater topic, personally, I prefer the image of plasma's to LCDs right now simply because of the image blurring. I watch mostly hockey and
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I'd imagine the smaller chips used in projection equipment don't have the same issues that a large flat LCD screen has.
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Oh, it's NOT direct view, but projected onto the screen?
Well, then, is it a projection TV?
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Re:Energy efficiency (Score:5, Insightful)
Another fine example of money being pissed up the wall in Britain.
Re:Energy efficiency (Score:5, Informative)
They have now been replaced with huge banks of LED displays, similar to those in airports (I believe London KX has done this as well), which are amazingly bright, incredibly readable, and 100x more reliable.
You mean these... (Score:5, Informative)
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Other than that, i would probably pick a nice consumer item like a 30" Dell LCD for the application, if i were to make something similar now.
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I dunno, I just think they were a step backwards when they were installed, and now they look absolutely terrible and will be in need of replacement, whereas the old f
Re:Energy efficiency (Score:5, Informative)
No they don't. Plasmas suffer burn-in because they emit colors in the same way as a CRT -- using red, green, and blue phosphors. "Burn-in" happens when the phosphors age non-uniformly, such as when a static image is held in place too long. You can combat this by properly setting your contrast (TVs are set to torch mode in the stores because it looks better under the flourescents; at home you should have your contrast set to a much lower level) and by pixel-shifting, but you can't eliminate it so long as the technology uses a consumable resource for emitting colored light (phosphors).
LCDs and DLPs don't burn in because they use filters over white light to emit colors. DLP does this with a color wheel rotating anywhere from 10,000 to 30,000 times per second, with the DMD adjusting for each window of the wheel to emit the correct amount of the base color of light (basic wheels contain red, green, and blue filters. Better wheels double up on the colors and often add several different shades of blue and green since our eyes are more attuned to those colors than red. Non-consumer high-end models have individual DMDs and filters for each color). LCDs have discrete filters for red, green, and blue, and the liquid crystal is set to a state to allow just the right amount of each through (thus you can do sub-pixel rendering, such as Cleartype font-smoothing). But it's still all about emitting filtered light, not emitting colored light from a phosphor. Your backlight may go out, but that's replaceable. Good luck replacing individual phosphors when they burn out.
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Re:Energy efficiency (Score:5, Informative)
The point was phosphors have a lifespan directly related to their average intensity, and for plasmas it's measurable in a matter of years if not months (for the difference between neighboring pixels).
I have seen it (Score:3, Informative)
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The about.com article didn't go into it but from what I've heard, most LCDs with a memory problem are either being forced into extremely fast color change times, or are extremely large (>24"). The former means the pixels are *very* sensitive, the latter meaning the traces per pixel are larger. In both cases, the persistance problem is simply that the capacitance voltage of the wires is approaching the lower threshold of the sensitivity of the pixels. To properly ground the traces to eliminate the
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As far as TV sets go, most people don't leave them on 24 hours a day.
The LCD displays were much more readable than CRTs would be in this application. It was in a control tower with lots of ambient light.
Re:Energy efficiency (Score:5, Informative)
Certainly DLP's don't suffer from burn in (though they have a lot of other issues of course, the infamous rainbow effect being the biggest problem - though things seem to be improving on that front) but the same can't be said for LCD TV's. Although Plasma screens seem to burn in more easily, LCD displays do suffer [apple.com] too [dell.com], however mostly it seems to only be an issue with larger displays (e.g. 30" or larger - the sort of size used in LCD TV's). I am not sure why that is though.
Your backlight may go out, but that's replaceable. Good luck replacing individual phosphors when they burn out.
That's a bit of a red herring to be fair. As with the back lights on an LCD display, Plasma screen will indeed burn out eventually (mine is rated for something like 8 years continuous usage - i.e. so even if I watch 12 hours a day (which obviously I'm not going to) it should be good for 14 years, which I'm comfortable with. Good luck getting either replaced though!
The depressing reality is, unless you have a good 3rd party repair shop in your area that are comfortable with this sort of thing, or you are willing to take your TV apart yourself you are SOL. Vendors like Sony, Phillips (etc.) just don't want to know and that ones that will talk to you invariably give you a price that is equal to or more than the cost of a brand new unit (especially on smaller screens), and of course new sets of better quality will almost certainly be available for 1/4 of the price by then.
Example: I bought a brand new model 32" Sony CRT 8 years ago for 1,500 UKP (the most expensive set in the store as it happened). I'm going to give it to someone in the office who can use a better TV as there is almost no point in trying to sell it - you can get a better set for about 250 UKP now. It has a long-standing problem with powering up from being completely off (it's okay if you leave it on standby, but otherwise you might need to flick it on and off a couple of times), but it would cost about the same as a new set just to get that issue resolved.
Re:Energy efficiency (Score:4, Informative)
FYI, it's more on the order of 100 rotations/sec
The reason the DMD does not suffer burn-in is the fact that the hinges that the mirrors are mounted on do not suffer from the same type of repetitive stress wearout that a larger hinge would, not anything due to the color wheel - top end LCDs and DLPs actually have one light source per primary color
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> No they don't.
Yes they do. Want to come to my office and look at some nice 20" LCDs with Apple menus burned into them?
Why would anyone buy either? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not very much of a television watcher, but I do sometimes have friends over to watch movies and such. I recently picked up a projector, and now have a 100ish" display that becomes a blank wall when I'm not using it.
I'm pretty happy with it, projectors are hardly a specialty item any more, and I doubt it was significantly more expensive than a 50" plasma or lcd television. So I'm having a hard time seeing why anyone who wants a big display would ever purchase anything other than a projector.
Is there something here I'm missing?
Re:Why would anyone buy either? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Why would anyone buy either? (Score:5, Informative)
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Modern projection systems are much more compact, an
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For a 50" plasma, you'd need about 4 ft x 2.5 ft of blank wall space.
I'd say there's a significant difference in the required space.
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This really depends on the projector. Mine has adjustable zoom and can easily create a larger image being only 8' away. The projector is mounted on the ceiling... I don't know about your room, but I generally don't have many obstructions hanging from the ceiling between the seating area and projection wall. Due to limited bulb life (and the expense
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First you have contrast ratio. Unless you keep the display compleately dark, a black screen isn't really black. Normal lighting sources boost the dark areas and destroy contrast and to a lesser extent color balance. You can get around this by keeping the room compleately dark, but thats not really practical. It might be workable for movie night, but I'd hate to be forced to do all my TV watching in a dark room. Not to mention windows and other possible light sources that m
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Re:Why would anyone buy either? (Score:5, Insightful)
There are a number of reasons why people don't want or can't use front projection.
Re:Why would anyone buy either? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm suprised nobody has mentioned lamp life yet. It's a pricy part and has a short life.
2. Video projectors have a very limited bulb life. In other words, if you are watching TV on your video projector about 3-4 hours every night, you would have to replace the light source bulb about once a year at 200-400 dollars a pop.
snipped from
http://hometheater.about.com/od/hometheaterbasics
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Because you have the exact same problem with DLP sets, and a similar issue with LCD (backlight). DLP bulbs are replaceable, though they usually last 2-3 years before replacement. Buy yourself a good store warranty for $100 and you'll get a free lamp replacement out of it (the only time store warrantees are worth anything). By the time you need a second lamp replacement (around the 5-6 year mark), you may as well b
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It is true that DLP projectors have the same issue with lamp life. The article was comparing plasma and LCD which is why I didn't mention DLP sets. Both my laptops are older than 3 years old and get more than 3 hours of use per day. Neither has required a lamp replacement. The 1500 to 3K hour life of a high intensity projector bulb is considerably shorter than a typical cold cathode lamp in an LCD set.
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I would hardly call it "very limited". I've been using my Sony projector to watch films about every other day for about three or four years and I haven't had to change the bulb yet.
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My projector [infocus.com] is about 13 feet from the screen and I get a nice 84" diagonal. I view it from my bed, so my head is underneath and in front of t
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The screen in action [headru.sh] 31MB file but you can stream it in VLC or Xine.
Clockwise from top left = DVB broadcast tv, VLC player streaming the X Files from my media server, WinDVD playing chronicles of Riddick, and RealPlayer streaming NasaTV live. The resolution looks crap, but bear in mind that it is only 800x600 and the video has been run through DrDivx ! Also it's hard to focus the camera on a live screen. The monitor is a 19" CRT at 1600x1200.
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Re:Why would anyone buy either? (Score:5, Insightful)
> big display would ever purchase anything other than a projector.
Because most people also use their TVs in the DAY or with lights on and projectors are absolutely crap in the daytime. The contrast ratio falls to next to nothing if there's any light in the room whatsoever.
The darkest black a projector can display is the black that you see when you look at a WHITE wall. Look at a nearby white wall NOW and decide for yourself if that's an acceptable BLACK level. If LCDs or Plasmas had a black level that bad, NOBODY would buy them and we'd all still be using CRT screens. The ONLY advantage of a projector is it's picture size, but the vast majority of people aren't prepared to cope with all the drawbacks just to get a bigger (washed out) picture.
Also, projectors are very difficult to site in the average living room. They need to go at the opposite end of the room to all your AV kit and preferably high up on a wall or ceiling. You either have to move all your AV kit to the back of the room and fire your remote controls backwards, or run a signal cable the whole distance of your living room to feed the projector.
They're great if all you want is a big picture in cinema-like blackout conditions, but they're hardly practical for the average family who needs to install it in a room with windows.
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Frankly, the idea of have a 50"+ screen in my living room is simply laughable. A living room is for more than just watching TV. A gargantuan TV dominating the space is just ugly, IMHO.
Which is why I plan to build a separate A/V room in my basement. Then I can have the big screen d
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1) Turn the brightness down. Many projectors have a half-brightness mode, usually named after one of the other benefits of not running full-blast (long-life, whisper-quiet, etc.). Use that mode and you'll have no problem seeing the picture during the daytime.
2) Don't use a white wall. Get a screen. White walls reflect all sorts of light (depending on the paint finish). Screens (even cheap ones) diffuse light just the right amount to give a good black level while allo
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In addition, these LEDs don't give a uniform light output over the surface area of the chip, so there would have to be additional items in the light path to ensure uniformity over the area of light output. (I'm just guessing based
Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
Also, they should put racing stripes on them.
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A mate of mine just knows that Plasma is the one to get, not this LDC (sic) or whatever...
I work with his partner, and have been educating her as to the benefits of LCD.
Recently they were out shopping and passed by an A/V store, so they went in for a look - he wanted to prove that LCDs were crap and Plasmas were without a doubt the one to get.
He walked purposefully into the store, had a good look over the various screens on display and then walked over to
Power consumption! (Score:4, Informative)
LCD power consumption GOOD
To hell with plasma and LCD (Score:3, Funny)
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Like this [3dvisor.com]?
(I'm not affiliated with them, just used tried one of them)
Why does nobody ever mention DLP? (Score:3, Interesting)
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DLP HDTVs (Score:2)
I'm not entirely sure of this, but my understanding is that DLP "televisions" are really rear-projection TVs: they have basically a DLP projector in the back, shining on the screen. That means you also need to factor in bulb replacement costs.
I think those two factors, plus general unfamiliarity in the marketplace, has led to them being less popular. And then there's the issue
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I'm not sure why anyone would find this appealing though. Where do you put your cable box, DVR, home theater receiver, DVD player, etc.? All that shit goes in the stand under my 32" CRT TV now. I don't know where the hell I'd put them if my TV just hung on the wall. I guess you could go crazy and build it all into shelves on the wall, but you'd still have the ugly cable
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Because DLP has inherent limitations LCD doesn't (Score:5, Informative)
1. It is inherently a projector technology, which means:
a. For a front projection situation, DLP image quality is directly dependent upon the illumination within the room and the screen.
b. For a rear projection situation (i.e. the one that looks like a stand-alone TV), DLP requires a screen that has inherently poor viewing angles, particularly when viewed above or below the vertical screen limits. Even older LCDs without the "180 degree" viewing angle are far better than any DLP RPTV screen.
2. It is a technology dependent upon light sources that (currently) have inherently poor lifetimes. Lamps are expensive replacements. When LEDs and lasers come more into the fold, this should alleviate this problem.
(Note: this could also be construed as an advantage since you'd have all new luminance and you can't replace the CCFL backlight in an LCD which has a tendency to degrade unevenly over time).
3. It is a technology that, unless you use three separate DLP chips for the primary colors, will be prone to rainbow effects. Even in the 3DLP setups, convergence can also become an issue.
DLP is good for certain applications but will never be the primary volume driver of the market. Two years ago, it was the only way to get a decent screen size for HD, but not any more. The whole industry has dogpiled onto LCD direct-view, and it'll only get cheaper from here.
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This is why HDTV discussions ignore DLP. The marketplace will ignore it too within about a y
50 inches, not surprised (Score:2, Interesting)
OK, but how much 50-inch-class LCD market is there outside of the United States.
My guess is it's pretty limited as well, after all, 50 inches is huge. I have a large house by English standards, and a 50 inch screen would simply look idiotic in my lounge. Anything larger than about 32-35 inches is simply too big for most houses.
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As a result you
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Personally, I'd like to knock through my two ~12' square reception rooms into one, but I think my landlord might have something to say if I did.
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Well pardon me for not visiting lounges in every country in the world for research purposes. Just going by what I've been told. I'm very happy you have a big one though.
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eh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny how 30% becomes virtually nothing when analysts work their magic.
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Note that he talks of MARKET, not sales.
Yes, there are 30% sold outside the US, but this in MANY countries. That means in many markets, which would have to get distinct marketing. in each country, sales are possbily to small individually to talk of a "market". Together, they are nice - but then, this is not ONE market.
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Sport... (Score:2)
I'm sure there are some US Slashdotters who have the same experience with sports like baseball.
Say what you want (Score:2)
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Can't stand LCD (Score:4, Interesting)
I just bought a 42" HDTV capable plasma, and had to turn the sharpness down to 50%, as otherwise all non-HDTV contents, including DVD's looked extremely blocky and I could see the MPEG artifacts everywhere - the default image was far too clear. I shudder at the thought of how horrendous it would have looked on an LCD screen, as I usually notice the pixelation far easier on LCD screens than I do on plasmas.
Maybe I'll consider an LCD screen when I'm using all HD content, or if they start supporting adaptively blurring lower resolution content sufficiently.
Sharp images only works for me when the DPI of the source is high enough that you can't see individual pixels at normal viewing distances.
Yes, I realize that means that I've on purpose chosen a screen with a "lower" picture quality, but the end result is far better with 90%+ of the content available to me. And it was cheap enough to replace in a couple of years if a usable LCD screen (or other tech) comes along.
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I believe the ideal distance to sit from a TV was between 6 and 8 times the diagonal. For your 42" set that's roughly 6 to 8m.
If, for example, you're sitting 4m from the TV (a common distance in a living room in an appartment), it's not that surprising that you see the pixels on the image.
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If anything, I've got too much softness by default on my LCD; I've been using the upscaler in the XBox 360 for DVDs instead, to avoid it.
plasma vs lcd (Score:2, Interesting)
When will LCD's offer 10000:1 contrast ratio (IE: good blacks). Plasma has it now.
When will LCD's be made in 50" screen sizes at prices under $2000-$2500 (can get a plasma in this size
and price now).
I currently have a 40" direct view tube tv and will be looking to replace it with a HiDef in the
near future. Translating the 4:3 aspect ratio to 16:9 means that to get a screen with the same height
I want at least a 46" display. (42" would be
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We're talking about getting large, affordable direct-view LCD panels to compete with plasma televisions.
Article in IEEE Spectrum (Score:5, Informative)
Their take on it? It won't be settled for another couple of years, and there will be two distinct categories: screens below 50" (or 42"), and screens larger. LCD will dominate the smaller screen size market, though SED may replace that when the cost comes down (after 2010?). For larger screens, don't discount projection technology, particularly in terms of cost.
Incidentally, the cover article [ieee.org] for this issue is on Blake Ross [wikipedia.org], whom they call the Firefox Kid.
IEEE (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:SED anyone? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:SED anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
SED:
[TMRC, from Light-Emitting Diode] Smoke-emitting diode. A friode that lost the war. See also LER. [Not to be confused with sed(1), the Unix stream editor. ESR]
http://catb.org/jargon/html/S/SED.html [catb.org]
--
BMO