Comments on: LCDs to overtake tube TVs in 2009
Flat-panel TVs are all the rage, and a new study says they're poised to become the most popular type of set.
Flat-panel TVs are all the rage, and a new study says they're poised to become the most popular type of set.
January 3, 2010 4:40 PM PST
January 3, 2010 3:10 PM PST
January 3, 2010 12:20 PM PST
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I want my flying car. Sci-fi predicted they'd be here by now. :(
and people are complaining about gas now? damn it would be substantially more money to move it the same distance
I want my flying car. Sci-fi predicted they'd be here by now. :(
and people are complaining about gas now? damn it would be substantially more money to move it the same distance
Tried LCD panels - dead pixels after a party or two.
LCD projection TV - bought 2 and have no problems. Doesn't burn in like plasma so I can watch 4:3 instead of stretching it to fill up the sides to avoid burn-in. And it's not as delicate as LCD panels.
I have a couple of LCD monitors which haven't had problems with dead pixels popping up. I had hoped this meant the problem was solved.
Tried LCD panels - dead pixels after a party or two.
LCD projection TV - bought 2 and have no problems. Doesn't burn in like plasma so I can watch 4:3 instead of stretching it to fill up the sides to avoid burn-in. And it's not as delicate as LCD panels.
I have a couple of LCD monitors which haven't had problems with dead pixels popping up. I had hoped this meant the problem was solved.
same $400 - 450 as current tvs. Otherwise they can keep them.
After looking at a computer screen for 10 hours a day, watching
television isn't a high priority in my house.
same $400 - 450 as current tvs. Otherwise they can keep them.
After looking at a computer screen for 10 hours a day, watching
television isn't a high priority in my house.
signals, if I recall. As it is, most folks can't really tell the difference
since the amount of information between the two is the same. The
only real difference is that some of the older LCD sets have distinct
smearing problems due to high pixel latency. The newest
generation of sets doesn't seem to have that problem and the sets
that will be out in '09 will probably have even less of a problem
with fast moving objects on screen.
display for the living room, but CRT still has
an edge in picture quality, even with HD.
HD has several different resolutions and the
highest resolution still isn't widely used (it
takes a lot of bandwidth). However, on
pixel-addressable displays, the artifacts of the
video compression are MUCH more evident and, to
me anyway, far more annoying. If you are
unfortunate enough to get your HD through cable,
that may be further compounded by the cable
company down-sampling the original HD signal to
reduce bandwidth consumption.
CRTs also have a better color (gamut and
fidelity) and typically better blacks.
LCDs selling points are low energy consumption
and size, not picture quality.
signals, if I recall. As it is, most folks can't really tell the difference
since the amount of information between the two is the same. The
only real difference is that some of the older LCD sets have distinct
smearing problems due to high pixel latency. The newest
generation of sets doesn't seem to have that problem and the sets
that will be out in '09 will probably have even less of a problem
with fast moving objects on screen.
display for the living room, but CRT still has
an edge in picture quality, even with HD.
HD has several different resolutions and the
highest resolution still isn't widely used (it
takes a lot of bandwidth). However, on
pixel-addressable displays, the artifacts of the
video compression are MUCH more evident and, to
me anyway, far more annoying. If you are
unfortunate enough to get your HD through cable,
that may be further compounded by the cable
company down-sampling the original HD signal to
reduce bandwidth consumption.
CRTs also have a better color (gamut and
fidelity) and typically better blacks.
LCDs selling points are low energy consumption
and size, not picture quality.
Don't be a sucker and pay a pretty price for LCD/Plasma. Wait for SED.
People with no jobs trying to sound "hautier than thou" to those who actually buy things. And by buying, lower the production costs so that people with no jobs can finally afford them.
But the first screens that should come out this Spring were postponed until the end of 2007. So, it appears to be another great technology that is DOA, over-promising and under-delivering (like LCoS).
Don't be a sucker and pay a pretty price for LCD/Plasma. Wait for SED.
People with no jobs trying to sound "hautier than thou" to those who actually buy things. And by buying, lower the production costs so that people with no jobs can finally afford them.
But the first screens that should come out this Spring were postponed until the end of 2007. So, it appears to be another great technology that is DOA, over-promising and under-delivering (like LCoS).
Though, I do have a 50" LCD proj with the HD package from DirecTV. It's a curse...once you watch sports in HD, you cannot go back!
- Q. Do Any Of You Actually Have HDTV? At All?
- by kamwmail-cnet1 June 6, 2006 7:16 AM PDT
- Lots of posters. Lots of mis-information. Lots of pie-in-the-sky. Lots of comments but no substance. All you all kiddies?
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
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- Agreed
- by dewalt25 June 6, 2006 1:18 PM PDT
- I agree...
- Like this
-
- Sure do
- by drewbyh June 7, 2006 9:02 AM PDT
- I've got 2 with HD cable. Love 'em. Tried over the air HD first but compression too high. Lots of pixelation. Very happy with HD cable so far.
- Like this
-
(52 Comments)Though, I do have a 50" LCD proj with the HD package from DirecTV. It's a curse...once you watch sports in HD, you cannot go back!