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War Paint
April-15th-2007, 09:07 AM
http://img135.imageshack.us/img135/4548/sonyoledpc1.jpg


TOKYO (Reuters) - Sony Corp (NYSE:SNE - news). said on Thursday it planned to start selling ultra-thin TVs using organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology this year, aiming to become the first to market with a TV using the promising next-generation display.

Several companies are investing in OLED technology because it can produce bright, colorful images and does not require a backlight as do liquid crystal displays (LCDs), allowing for a thinner panel. OLED panels are also said to be energy-efficient and good at reproducing fast-moving images.

At a display forum in Tokyo, customers, suppliers and even rival TV makers turned their backs on 50-inch and bigger TVs to throng before Sony's tiny 11-inch OLED TVs. "LCD and plasma displays look faded in comparison," said a Denso Corp. employee who declined to be named, fighting to take a picture of the new TVs. OLED displays are already used in digital cameras, cellphones and other devices with relatively small panels. But cost and technology hurdles have so far prevented them from being mass produced for use in larger equipment such as TVs.

The OLED TV to be launched this year will be made by ST Liquid Crystal Display Corp., a joint venture between Sony and Toyota Industries Corp., Sony spokesman Daiichi Yamafuji said, declining to give unit targets or a likely price. Sony has invested aggressively in LCD technology and is now the world's largest player in the LCD TV market.

"It won't be easy for OLED TVs to replace LCD TVs, but we would like to turn OLED TVs into a big new business," Sony Executive Deputy President Katsumi Ihara said in a speech at the display forum. The Nikkei business daily reported earlier that Sony would begin by mass-producing about 1,000 of the 11-inch OLED sets a month -- a fraction of its LCD TV business -- and would aim to keep their price within a few times that of existing flat TVs.
"OLED sets are very expensive, and we mean to begin first by marketing the TVs as a status symbol," said Sony's Kazuhiro Imai, a senior manager of the company's TV and Video business group. "We will see where the business goes from there."

Ihara said Sony slightly exceeded its target of selling 6 million LCD TVs in the business year ended last month, and reiterated a target to sell 10 million units this year.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/sony_oel_tv_dc

heyholetsgogrant
April-15th-2007, 09:10 AM
Meh, it will probably cost thousands for one of those...I'm happy with my Olevia..

-Grant

Teller
April-15th-2007, 09:12 AM
Incredible. The speed of technology advancement never ceases to blow my mind.

TorresA
April-15th-2007, 09:17 AM
Hmmm I thought I read before it cost less to make OLED then Plasma and LED. But since it is new technology they charge a premium price.

China
April-15th-2007, 10:47 AM
When I first saw the title it looke to me like:

Sony to release new tv with OLD technology.

Raub
April-15th-2007, 01:55 PM
Sooner or later they'll have a paint type coating that will just go on your wall and *bam* you've got a huge tv. Really amazing stuff they're coming up with.

PokerPacker
April-15th-2007, 02:43 PM
Sooner or later they'll have a paint type coating that will just go on your wall and *bam* you've got a huge tv. Really amazing stuff they're coming up with.
its called a projector :silly:

jbooma
April-15th-2007, 03:54 PM
Incredible. The speed of technology advancement never ceases to blow my mind.

you need to update your sig we have 3 wins :D

desioreo87
April-15th-2007, 03:55 PM
Technology is the craziest thing, however im sure they ave tech thats 2 generations past this but they want to make as much money on the existing genereation first.

Lloyds' Mongolian Beef
April-15th-2007, 04:18 PM
Meh, it will probably cost thousands for one of those...I'm happy with my Olevia..

-GrantI thought you weren't ahppy with it at all? Didn't you start a thread voicing your displeasure with it?

heyholetsgogrant
April-15th-2007, 04:27 PM
I thought you weren't ahppy with it at all? Didn't you start a thread voicing your displeasure with it?


Ok, a few weeks ago I bought an Olevia 32in HD and it was perfect. About a week ago I started to notice a light Fuzz/Static that was barely noticeable in HDMI mode. You can really see it when you closer to the TV, and its slightly more Noticeable during ESPN HD and live channels like MUSIC HD and INHD. It seems to cut down on the sharpness. To figure out whether it was Comcast HD or not, I switched the HDMI cable with my HD up conversion Home Theater system and it was still kind of noticeable. So I have come to the conclusion that it’s either the HDMI cable or TV itself. Has anyone had this problem? Are HDTV suppose to have slight fuzz when you set closer to the HDTV, or is this a figure of my imagination?

http://www.extremeskins.com/forums/showthread.php?p=3678989#post3678989

It was the HDMI cord, I just replaced it...

-Grant

War Paint
April-15th-2007, 05:15 PM
I can't wait for the technology where it allows me to actually help Indiana Jones lift up the Ark :laugh: .

Cheers, Beers and Mountaineers
April-15th-2007, 05:25 PM
I can't wait for the technology where it allows me to actually help Indiana Jones lift up the Ark :laugh: .

or the other things you could possibly do... :hump: :paranoid:

Lloyds' Mongolian Beef
April-15th-2007, 06:47 PM
http://www.extremeskins.com/forums/showthread.php?p=3678989#post3678989

It was the HDMI cord, I just replaced it...

-GrantThat's good to know. I had heard great things about them, but became a little skeptical after your original post. I'm probably going to get one soon.

heyholetsgogrant
April-15th-2007, 07:38 PM
That's good to know. I had heard great things about them, but became a little skeptical after your original post. I'm probably going to get one soon.


Consumer reports highly reccomended Olevia HDTV's in their latest HDTV testing done in Feb/March of this year. The picture is amazing for the amount of money you pay. If you buy a HDTV, buy one from either BJ's or Costco. I bought my 32in Olevia HDTV from BJ's Wholesale in Columbia, MD for $599.99, the picture is not far off, if not better than some $1000-$1500 sets....What a steal!

-Grant

TheREALJBird
April-15th-2007, 07:43 PM
I read about this technology a while ago, I'll be interested to see how it does. Personally using LED technology seems like a step down but they know what they're doing

Enter Apotheosis
April-15th-2007, 09:18 PM
Hmmm I thought I read before it cost less to make OLED then Plasma and LED. But since it is new technology they charge a premium price.

The fact that its not in mass production and there hasn't been a market established for OLEDs yet means that the prices will be jacked up for a while.