Philips handing over North American TV manufacturing to Funai
Update: Philips let us know Ambilight remains dead and buried, but its 2008 models will continue as planned.
Posts with tag lg.philips
LG.Display, née LG.Philips, will soon have a little less Philips in it, after the Netherlands portion of the collaboration sells off about 23 million shares (valued at $1 billion). Why Philips is distancing itself (dropping from an original 44.6% share of the company to 19.9% before this sale) from what at least seemed to be a good LCD operation once upon a time -- especially when everyone else is looking for a teammate -- is less clear, but maybe it just wants to help Toshiba out with a few bills. [Warning: subscription req'd]

We know that many consumers like their flat panels big and cheap even at the expense of quality. No doubt then, Vizio's new "full-HD" 52-inch LCD rumored to sell at Costco next month will be a hit. The $2,200 sets are even said to carry an LG.Philips panel according to DigiTimes' Taiwanese supply chain sources. Promising, but will they bring LED backlighting, 120Hz tech, and 1080p24 HDMI input? Doubtful, but the money you save should keep the fridge swollen with Bud into the foreseeable future.
Matsushita, maker of Panasonic-brand products, and Hitachi are part of IPS Alpha Technology who together with LG.Philips have plans to dominate the
What's
that old saying? If you fail once, try, try again. Sony must have that in mind after
failing to sell as many LCDs in Europe as they said they would. So what do they do? They say they are going
to increase their market share by a whopping 20% over there. Sony recently shot their worldwide LCD market share past Samsung, LG.Philips and Sharp to claim the number one
spot, so this might not be out of the question after all. Hey, more competition for them means a better price for
us.
This is
going to be the year of flat panel TVs. Everyone, from Samsung to Sharp to
Hitachi, have stepped up and raised their output capacity of their plasmas and LCDs.
Sorry Samsung, but there's a new king and his name is LG.Philips. The former number one LCD panel maker was dethroned by LG.Philips as the
largest LCD manufacturer in the world. The market shares for all panels ten inches and above top out at 21.5% globally
for LG.Philips, while Samsung captured 20.9% in 2005. The new champ is betting heavily on
increased HDTV adoption in the LCD segment; sounds like a safe bet to us, at least until those new-fangled SED sets hit the shelves before the
year end.
We're fairly certain that the LG 102-inch PDP has nothing to do with soaring LG.Philips
profits; after all, who's got six-figures to drop on a wall of 1080p perfection? No, LG.Philips must be selling the
smaller LCD sets, and plenty of 'em if the financials are in order. LG.Philips exceeded analyst expectations with a net
profit of 328 billion won ($333.2 million) for the last quarter of '05, which compares to 35.4 billion won a year
earlier. Hm, almost a ten-fold increase; that's bigger than the screen size increase from 42- to 103-inches. Could the ambilight technology be
shedding some light on the profits?



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