Laser TVs launching Christmas 2007
Remember that laser-powered projection TV announced by Mitsubishi earlier this year? Well, another prototype was turned out again today in Australia only this time, by Arasor, the Australian company that will manufacture the unique optoelectronic chip central to the laser projection device developed by Silicon Valley-based Novalux. The new sets are touted to be half the price, twice as good, and use a quarter of the electricity of conventional plasma and LCD TVs and be half the weight and depth of modern plasmas. That "twice as good" statement comes from the tech's ability to up the color content from 30-35% of what the eye can see to 90% for a "lifelike image" on the display. Set to launch in time for the 2007 holidays under Samsung and Mitsubishi brands (among others), Novalux's top-dog, Jean-Michel Pelaprat, went so far as to predict that laser television would come to dominate the market above 40-inches, displacing plasmas altogether. Hmm, well, possibly on a long enough timeline. However, with mass produced SED TVs coming in 2008 and big-azz "Full-HD" LCDs and high-contrast plasma panels on the horizon, don't count on manufactures turning their backs on those massive investments in LCD and plasma technology just yet kid.[Thanks, David W. and everyone who sent this in]






















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Jake @ Oct 10th 2006 6:50PM
Wow. The article just pulls it out (doesn't attribute) but says that the laser displays will be "half the weight and depth of plasma." Half the DEPTH? Jeez...
*Please be real, please be real...*
HaMMeReD @ Oct 10th 2006 8:44PM
The human eye can make out about 2 million colors on emmisive displays (24bpp 8bits r g & b) and about 4 billion (32bpp, 12 bits r, g & b, or 8 bits cmyk) on non-emissive mediums, such as photo's and other printed media.
So my point being, this being a emmissive technology, and considering all hd content is encoded at 24bpp depths, is there any point to producing colors that are visually indistinguishable from other colors that you can draw on the screen.
Maybe they mean it'll be another HDR era monitor, with control over brightness at each pixel, as well as color, that would increase the visible spectrum quite a bit. Current content doesnt have enough color depth to be improved significantly on a better screen.
Garret @ Oct 12th 2006 7:24PM
so far there's CRT's, LCD's, Plasmas, and now Laser TV's. I wonder how many different types there will be 50 years from now.