Looking for a great all-around HDTV? (Labs tests from PCWorld).
The Top 10 HDTVs of 2011:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/240397/the_top_10_hdtvs_of_2011.html
In a related story:
http://www.cepro.com/article/panasonic_reducing_plasma_tv_production_workforce/
Panasonic Reducing Plasma TV Production, Workforce.
Panasonic is reducing its plasma TV output and cutting its workforce by 1,000. Panasonic will stop making plasmas at its Amagasaki No. 3 factory by the end of March 2012.
By Grant Clauser, October 21, 2011
While there are three major TV manufacturers - LG, Panasonic, Samsung - still producing plasma TVs, one of those three is scaling back considerably on its output.
Panasonic, according to Reuters, will reduce plasma TV production and cut its workforce by about 1,000. Reuters describes Panasonics plasma TV business as a loss-making television unit.
Panasonic will stop making plasmas at its Amagasaki No. 3 factory by the end of March 2012, according to Reuters, which also speculates that Panasonic plans to sell off an LCD factory.
Related: Sony Recalls 1.6M Bravia LCDs | 10 Creative Ways to Mount a Flat-Panel TV
Part of this is likely a move to reduce redundancies that followed Panasonics takeover of Sanyo. Panasonic may be scaling back on its target of producing 25 million TV sets a year (plasma and LCD combined).
Globally, plasma holds a much smaller market than LCD. According to research firm DisplaySearch, 248 million TVs will ship in 2011, but only 17 million will be plasma.
Its a curious move because throughout 2010 plasma was increasing market share. And Panasonic was held 40 percent of the market in 2010, with Samsung and LG following. However, plasma demand began to drop mid-year with an estimated decline of 6 percent.
Thanks LVD. The problem with high performance models is, the programming is so abysmal, all we need most of the time is a barf-proof screen. ;’)
I have the Samsung...it sure looks good to me, but that must be taken with a grain of salt, since I wasn’t watching large screen for many years.