Panasonic is providing its 152in plasma display panel to NBC during the network’s studio coverage of the Winter Games from Vancouver, British Columbia. The company is providing NBC with the panel, one ...
Irvine, Calif. – Samsung Electronics America's Digital Information Technology division claims to have smashed the size barrier in plasma displays with the launch of its 63-inch PPM63H1 at the recent ...
SEOUL/TOKYO (Reuters) - Plasma display panel (PDP) technology makers are pinning high hopes on the emerging but uncertain 3D TV market to claw back market share after falling behind popular LCD flat ...
In the ever-expanding arena of large-display technology, is plasma here to stay? “Plasma displays, I think, are a very awkward technology,” James Jaskie, chief scientist at Motorola’s Microelectronics ...
The future of television is as slim as three inches, can be mounted on your wall, and produces unparalleled images. High cost may deter average consumers, but industry insiders expect plasma screens ...
Sony, the world's largest consumer electronics group, said on Thursday it had reached a deal with NEC for a steady supply of plasma display panels used in large flat-screen televisions. Sony is also ...
MANHASSET, N.Y. &#151 In its latest move to capture the booming flat-panel TV market, Hitachi Ltd. has announced revised plans to bolster plasma display production at the Miyazaki Works facility of ...
Plasma displays were once the creme-de-la-creme of television technology. With deep blacks and great colour, they could rival CRTs at a time when a lot of the LCD technology at the time was often seen ...
Go faster, farther, more efficiently. That's the goal driving spacecraft propulsion engineers like Chen Cui, a new assistant professor at the University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied ...
I'm shopping around for a 42" Panasonic plasma at the moment. The P42G20B (not sure what the equivalent US model is, this is a UK one) looks like the sweet spot, having their infinite black pro panel.
We know that LCD monitors display a given image line by line, generally from top to bottom ("raster-scan" display). This explains tearing if the image changes during the scanning process (mostly in ...