Posted on 01/08/2007 5:27:27 AM PST by Tolsti
Paragraphs!!!!!!!!!
Sorry, it came out really nasty.
OK now having read it, sounds downright great, just wonder how long the lamp life is.
Over 20,000 hours.
12 years of 8 hours per day. Basically lifetime of the set.
So why is my TI stock still a dog?
Thnere is no lamp. It says it uses LED's as light source. Much, much lower heat and much longer lifetime (indefinite?)
My Sony SXRD is tremendous.
I have a 2006 model Samsung 1080p DLP. I love it, but I'd like to upgrade to LED powered in the coming few years.
The only thing on the TV fit to watch now are the old movies . Why should I worry about High Definition when the TV programs suck anyway.?
Oh and to make things worse now basketball season is on top of us Pheeeeeww. That really sucks.
Casablanca and other classics are showing up on hddvd/blu-ray. I happen to like both old and new movies, and they are all vastly improved with an HD source.
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Slim DLP HDTVs, Solid-State Illumination and New Imaging Innovations Take
Center Stage at the DLP CES Booth
LAS VEGAS, Jan. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- DLP(R) products from Texas
Instruments (TI) (NYSE: TXN) are demonstrating innovation leadership by
showing the first HDTV with hang-on-the-wall slim design featuring
solid-state LED illumination and full-HD 1080p resolution. This DLP HDTV
demonstrates the flexibility and performance of DLP technology using
advanced components to create an incredible high definition image on the
screen. This new product, along with other DLP HDTV innovations is on
display at the 2007 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) (Central
Hall - Booth 8204).
This first-of-a-kind product concept is enabled by a new .65" 1080p DLP
chipset that is optimized to drive solid-state LED arrays to drastically
increase contrast performance beyond 100,000 to 1. New 2007 products from
Samsung based on this new chipset will also be on display.
The 10-fold contrast improvement provides for a better viewing
experience in almost any ambient room lighting situation. Additionally, LED
illumination increases the color saturation to nearly 140% of the NTSC TV
standard and delivers a color refresh rate of up to 48x the standard TV
frame rate when combined with the inherent speed of DLP technology. LED
illumination also provides "Instant On/Off" functionality and replaces a
conventional lamp with a long-lasting (lifetime) light source.
Slim DLP products provide the biggest picture in the smallest space by
utilizing an ultra-thin bezel that maximizes the viewable screen while also
being the thinnest freestanding display at their screen size. At
approximately half the weight of plasma TVs, these innovative DLP HDTVs can
be placed almost anywhere within the home, including easy shelf mounting
without requiring expensive heavy duty wall brackets. Samsung's 2007 DLP
line-up includes additional slim DLP HDTV offerings and other manufactures
are also expected to introduce slim models in 2007.
"We are thrilled to continue the DLP tradition of HDTV leadership by
introducing new innovations to enhance image quality even further," said
Adam Kunzman, business manager, DLP HDTV Products, Texas Instruments. "By
utilizing advanced illumination such as LED, DLP is capable of exceeding
100,000 to 1 contrast ratio, while displaying a wider color gamut with full
1080p resolution. The new slim and lightweight cabinet offers a stylish
design plus additional flexibility in HDTV placement."
According to The NPD Group, DLP was the number one selling 1080p HDTV
technology through November 2006 as well as the leading micro display
projection technology with 43% of the market share. DLP HDTVs are available
from leading manufacturers, including Mitsubishi, NuVision, Panasonic,
Philips, RCA, Samsung, Toshiba and more. CES attendees can view the new
slim designs and LED-based DLP HDTVs as well as other exciting DLP image
display products at the DLP Products booth.
Additional DLP innovations, including the integration of a 3D display
mode, will be demonstrated by multiple DLP HDTV customers at CES. Due to
the speed of the DLP technology, true stereoscopic high definition 3D is
possible for an immersive gaming experience. TI is working with select
customers to integrate 3D imaging in future DLP HDTV models.
About Texas Instruments DLP Products
DLP display technology from Texas Instruments offers clarity down to
the most minute detail, delivering pictures rich with color, contrast and
brightness to large-screen HDTVs and projectors for business, home,
professional venue and digital cinema (DLP Cinema(R)). 75 of the world's
top projection and display manufacturers design, manufacture and market
products based on DLP technology. DLP is the only HDTV technology built
from a foundation in the digital cinema where it set the industry standard
demonstrated by the deployment of DLP Cinema technology in 3,000 theaters
worldwide. At the heart of every DLP chip is an array of up to 2.2 million
microscopic mirrors which switch incredibly fast to create a high
resolution, highly reliable, full color image. DLP technology's chip
architecture and inherent speed advantage provides razor-sharp images and
excellent reproduction of fast motion video. Since early 1996, more than 10
million DLP subsystems have been shipped. For more information, please
visit http://www.dlp.com.
About Texas Instruments:
Texas Instruments Incorporated provides innovative DSP and analog
technologies to meet our customers' real world signal processing
requirements. In addition to Semiconductor, the company includes the
Educational Technology business. TI is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and
has manufacturing, design or sales operations in more than 25 countries.
Texas Instruments is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the
symbol TXN. More information is located on the World Wide Web at
http://www.ti.com.
DLP and DLP Cinema are registered trademarks of Texas Instruments.
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All DLP's, even LED use a lamp source.
TXN is cheap, isn't it? PE of 10!
I've had it for 8 years. Love the company and products.
Guess what?? All those old movies and Tv programs that were recorded on film (not video) ARE being viewed in HD now! They were filmed in HD essentially. (film resolution exceeeds the eye, and exceeds 1080p)
Its ironic. My wife and I are watching Hogans Hero's on HDNET in HDTV and it is awesome (1080i). I have never seen such awesome resolution and brilliant colors in a TV series. They have loads of old movies that are getting scanned into 1080 resolution. they are fantastic.
I just finished watching the HD version of The Andromeda Strain last night. great.
In fact, HD will help preserve the old films and series while the latest crap that is recorded on non-HD video cams will fall into oblivion soon enough.
You are confusing LCD's with LED's. Current DLP's do use a lamp light source, and non DLP imagers, like the Sony SXRD use LCD's with a lamp to create the image.
But the article refers specifically to using LED's (light emitting) as an alternate light source to the lamp.
LED"S have the advantage of having a very narrow, specific, light frequency, thus use much less power for the same brightness and use much less heat.
The LED will replace the lamps for some new HDTV's.
Samsung HL-S5679W LED DLP Set
July 18th, 2006HL-S5679W-samsung.jpgxOkay looks like Samsung has finally started shipping the HL-S5679W LED DLP Set which is the company s first 1,080p high-definition DLP rear-projection set using a light-emitting diode (LED). The postage size LED lighting is an alternative to the traditional UHP lamp and consists of 18 LEDs (six each of red, blue, and green). The average lifespan of a LED is about 20,000 hours and is known to enhance the color productivity and combat the color bar patterns during high paced shots. Some other impressive features found on Samsung s latest offering includes; a 56W-inch 16:9 screen, 1,920-by-1,080p resolution, 1,080p-capable HDMI input, unidirectional CableCARD slot and built-in ATSC tuning.It is available for $4,199 now.
If it's the same as regular "big-screen" rear-projection DLP, it's quite sufficient, at least 20k hours.
-Football
-HD Movies (even old ones are being restored and made available in HD)
-Discovery HD (very cool stuff)
I have plenty of space and plenty of power in my living room so i don't forsee any upgrades for quite some time. The 60" Sony SXRD with WEGA engine will last some time.
My next addition will be a BlueRay. I haven't decided whether to get the BlueRay reader/writer for my computer and then use the computer with the HDMI link to the HDTV to play the DVD's, or a stand-alone BlueRay.
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