• With the growing popularity of HDTV, more and more viewers are changing to high definition television. And to keep up with this, broadcasters are at a faster rate than ever making high def programs.

    Since there’s a deadline of Feb 17, 2009 for all broadcasters to shift to HD, the popularity of this fashion of shifting has grown. Families stuck with their old television sets that are not compatible with this new technology, have to get themselves a digital-to-analog converter or acquire an high definition antenna!

    If you choose on getting a HD television, then it is advisable that you do considerable research to know what exactly is acquirable in the market and what you need to discover out about hd. Once you have purchased your set, you will need to decide a cable provider that offers you digital cable service and that Hi def comes part of their package.

    Be conscious though that if you select a Cable/Dish provider to get high def you may be charged more for your local stations. The average fee for receiving your local hd stations via your provider is around $10/month over and above your regular statement.

    The simplest and cheapest way (free) of receiving high definition delivered to your home is via an antenna. That’s right , just the initial cost of an hdtv antenna will be all that is spent to acquire your hd signals! The choices you have for an HD television are unimagined. You have plasma, LCD (liquid crystal display), DLP (digital light processing) or LCOS (liquid crystal on silicon), all of which are types of monitors.

    Don’t forget the type of displays also…rear projection, front projection and flat screen will be choices you’ll see when shopping for a tv. Numerous HDTV consumers like the wall display monitor, be it the plasma or the LCD.

    But be prepared, you will pay a price for these high definition sets, particularly the bigger screens of 55″. If you are looking for something less pricy and not willing to compromise on the calibre, then look to LCD displays that are 42 inches or less in size.

    In the end everyone across the country will eventually have to make the shift to HDTV! Either by choosing to get the high def signals via their Cable/Dish company or as likely most of the 30+ million consumers with the old-fashion type analog antenna will select to get up on their roofs and exchange it out for the fresh designed HDTV antenna.

    Author: Jim Williams

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  • Old times have different entertainment solutions which have now become defunct and obsolete. When one zooms back to the present day and age, one cannot afford to ignore the tremendous impact of ‘Digital Revolution’ that has redefined everything from communication, to internet or marketing to education and last but not the least, the entertainment models.

    The whole idea of entertainment has undergone a sea change as a direct consequence of the overwhelming growth in “Digital Technology”. In this context, the experience of Television viewing becomes even more relevant; in the sense that we have come a long way from the old days of black and white monotonous CRT television viewing to present day’s growing obsession with Liquid Crystal Display(LCD) television.

    Little wonder, with technology moving fast at a nail-biting speed, one observes a cut down in the price tags of expensive electronic gadgets including LCD TVs. Bearing in mind that today’s television market is flooded with a plethora of latest LCD TV designs and configurations, it becomes increasingly important for customer’s to make the best possible bargain.

    A few popular LCD TV brands include companies like Phillips, Samsung and Haier. An intelligent and discerning customer should critically evaluate the various features that different companies’ products come packaged with. So, if you are planning to buy a LCD TV then Samsung has a wide variety of customised models to suit your requirements.

    Next, even “more good news is that Samsung LCD TVs come packaged with elegant and classy features to suit every man’s budge”. Latest LCD TV models by Samsung include models namely Samsung LA 19R71, Samsung LA 26R71, Samsung LA32S8 and Samsung LA 40S8.

    Samsung’s cheap LCD TVs are already “selling like hot cakes” in the market with more innovative and exciting projects in the pipeline. The reason why Samsung has managed to establish itself as a credible brand; sustain its viability; quell competition can be attributed to its unique and pioneering amalgamation of digital technology and elegance. The fact that Samsung effortlessly continues to woo new customers coupled with the increasing demand that it faces from the customer’s around the world speak volumes about its classic and unbeatable quality standards.

    Author: Raisa Raima

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  • Cinemas have had less and less people visiting them over the years. And why should they! Today, home cinema is a big possibility. And you can even find projectors HDTV, which puts those old projectors found in schools to shame! Join me as we take a look at tips to buying projectors HDTV.

    There are big benefits to buying projectors with HDTV. There is no need to carry heavy equipment. HDTV projectors have no need for being in a permanent place. In fact you could easily take the HDTV projector to several places. You could put it in your room, downstairs, have it even in the kitchen!

    There are some things to think about, when looking for projectors HDTV. You will need to realize there are differences between a standard LCD television that has high definition, and a HD projector.

    The biggest difference that you will find is that the HD projectors will have a lamp, instead of a cathode ray tube or CRT as used to be found in old bulky televisions. Though having a lamp does have its benefits, it can work out as the most important consideration you look at, when thinking of buying a projector with high definition.

    You see, the lamps are great, however, over time they produce less light. Also, like any other light bulb illuminating your home, they have a lifespan. This lifespan can be between 2000-4000 hours.

    Though this can seem like a lot of time, it can be a hassle trying to find HD projector lamps, when the lamp blows! The best solution is to look for the highest lifespan bulbs, but this is not always cost effective or cheap.

    This becomes the second biggest consideration, and that is price. It may even be your number 1 factor, when looking to buy high definition projectors. You see, projectors with high definition don’t come cheap. They can easily go over and above several thousand dollars.

    Is it worth it? Of course! Consider you get a home cinema. You get portability, and much more. Not to mention that today’s projectors have high definition, and it makes it so much more a worthy purchase.

    When your HDTV projector is switched off, it doesn’t take up as much space as a conventional television. It looks sleek, and provides entertainment how it should be!

    A great tip that I can offer you, is that when buying HDTV projectors, make sure that you get a projector screen. A projector screen makes all the difference to the image. And the quality in color and brightness makes it well worth the purchase.

    Author: Koz Huseyin

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  • HDTVs have changed the face of television viewing. The HV’s possess a screen, which can match the size of projectors, and movie screens. And not just that, but they also include crystal clear pictures and Dolby Digital 5.1 stereophonic sounds, apart from the mammoth flat and wide screen. The types of HDTV’s are also varied, ranging from CRT and DLP to LCD and Plasma HDTV. A large number of leading TV manufacturers have also produced many interesting models. Many competitors like Samsung, Sony and Pioneer continue to one up each other with amazing picture quality and sleek design.

    Being the number one electronics manufacturer in the world, Samsung has managed to gain a lot of market share and also become the official HDTV of the NFL. HDTV being a drastic launch from the ordinary television sets, they are seen as quite beyond the reach of the usual customer. But makers are trying to downscale the prices to accommodate everyone. The rear-projection TV (RPTV) is made with such an aim. These models are based on DLP technologies as developed by Texas Instruments. The particular model mentioned above includes TI’s latest chip designed on the lines of DLP, yielding better pictures at the same time. This model is one of the very first to use the new HD3 .55-inch micro-display of TI. It has a reduced chip size and a resultant cheaper cost of the chip. Large manufacturers takes into account four factors to determine the standard of the display performance which are contrast ratio, grayscale linearity, RGB color response and color temperature linearity. These factors significantly help towards ensuring that the display is able to distinguish between the subtleties in colors.

    If you are an impule shopper or hate spending hours researching TV’s, sticking to a brand name manufacturer is probably your best bet. If you are a more picky shopper, you will want to visit various HDTV review websites to determine which one will be best for your home. You can choose between rear projection (which is usually cheaper) or you can go all out for a LCD or Plasma flat panel which will cost you more but typically have a better picture.

    Although the picture of a rear projection HDTV isn’t quite as impressive, you may notice that you can save hundreds or thousands of dollars for the same size TV over a LCD or Plasma flat panel. For the average TV watcher, a rear projection is usually leaps and bounds above your old CRT monitor.

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  • If you’re one of the Flintstones, you may still be using an old-fashioned curved-screen television. It’s time to switch up to one of the new flat-screen televisions, don’t you think?

    All types of flat-screen televisions - from LCD display televisions to plasma TVs and projector units, are superior to old screens in a variety of ways. They don’t lose definition when seen from the edges, making those least-desired seats in your living room perfectly acceptable. They also have significantly better resolution than old-style televisions. You may still be able to make out the pixels when you sit close, but because flat screen television sets use digital technology instead of less-accurate analog, they have a much superior picture, either in still frames or motion. And they are designed to work well with all the latest technology, from blu-ray to HDTV.

    Up until recently, flat-screen sets have been on the expensive side, and a lot of people who needed a new set were waiting until the prices came down a little. Well - it’s time. Small LCD TVs cost what an old-fashioned television would cost, if you could still find them, and even the large screens are often under a thousand dollars.

    Before you buy, though, you need to understand a little bit about these new technologies.

    LCD TVs use a liquid crystal display (LCD). Watches using this technology in monochrome have been around for decades, but only in the last ten years have researchers figured out how to create good-quality color liquid crystal that is reliable and long-lasting. An LCD TV has a nice thin appearance, and is basically a layer of liquid crystals sandwiched between transparent layers, with a backlight behind everything. The light shines through the liquid crystals, which have been polarized to show up in the different colors for your display - and there’s your television. LCD TVs, when kept dim, use very little electricity, making them great for a darkened TV room. And they are among the cheapest flat-screen televisions you can buy.

    LCD TVs do have a couple of drawbacks: first, older models are subject to “ghosting”, where a dim image of a previously-displayed picture can be seen through the new picture; for this reason, it’s wiser to buy LCD TVs new. They may also not be the best choice for a fast-paced game, as they often have a lag time that can mess you up. Blacks aren’t always as sharp and dark as you might like, another reason to view in a darkened room. And if you mistreat it, you can wind up with “dead” pixels, where nothing will display because that segment of LCD has been destroyed. In most new LCD TVs, though, these problems are minimal or nonexistent.

    Plasma TVs are also flat-screen televisions, but work very differently from LCD TVs and have a very different set of strengths and weaknesses. While you can lay an LCD TV on its back - carefully - without ruining it, a plasma television can be destroyed if it is laid flat. That’s because instead of liquid crystals, it uses an inert gas sandwiched between two pieces of glass to create its display. Seals more easily come loose when the plasma TV is laid flat, allowing the gas to escape right then or over time.

    Provided you care for it well and mount it properly, your plasma TV will function well for years. Unlike LCD TVs, plasma TVs display blacks very well (one selling point) and most will also work great for fast-refreshing games. Plasma TVs are often advertised as having the most realistic, highest-resolution, best-contrast display of all televisions, and this is probably true in almost every situation. Drawbacks include the expense - plasma TVs are not economical to make in small sizes, so you’ll have to buy a large one - and the relative fragility of these televisions.

    Both plasma and LCD TVs usually need good wall mounts. The last thing you want to do with your high-def TVs is install them, only to have them fall down a couple of weeks later! Quality wall mounts for HDTVs should include very good hardware, preferably made by the same manufacturer that produced the television, and excellent directions so you can easily put it up yourself. If you are at all worried that you will not install it right, it may be wise to have someone install it for you.

    DLP TVs are the third major set of television displays in use today. These are also called rear-projection televisions, and while they are significantly cheaper than either LCD or plasma TVs, they also are larger and bulkier (though not as bulky as projection TVs were in the past) and have a somewhat less impressive display. Still, for most uses DLP TVs do fine, and because the light source in a DLP TV is usually replaceable by the consumer, they have a much, much longer lifespan.

    Very similar to DLP TVs are projector units. These gadgets are often small enough to carry by hand, but can project a movie-screen-size picture if they have a high enough resolution. Similar in appearance to an old-fashioned slide projector, projector units are a great choice for a small area, for someone who needs a portable large television, or for someone who wants a television without having an obvious television.

    Your Home Theater

    Plasma TVs, LCD TVs, DLP TVs, and projector units are all high-def TVs, as long as they have the appropriate tuner. Once you have them set up, you need to think about other components of your home theater. After all, what’s a large-screen television if you have to sit in your old uncomfortable couch to watch it?

    Your first thoughts should be for electronics to enhance your viewing experience: good surround-sound speakers for a great theater experience, and universal remote controls to sit in comfort as you control everything in your environment yourself.

    Once you have your electronics in line, go for the last thing on your list: theatre furniture. Your home experience, with comfortable chairs that don’t fold up when you stand up, can be superior to one at the local movie house. Look for spacious, durable seats that can handle spills as well as roomy cup holders and somewhere to put snacks, remotes, and anything else you habitually keep close while you’re watching your favorite flicks.

    Author: SnS Designs Inc

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  • Anyone who has been watching TV for a few decades now tends to feel that flat panel television is the best thing to have happened to television viewers. The market is now flooded with advanced television technology in the form of plasma televisions, LCD televisions, DLP televisions and projection TV.

    It’s The Difference:
    Flat panel televisions comprise of Plasma, LCD, rear projection, and DLP TV. These terms can appear confusing to someone who is trying to decide on which of these is best. Here is a quick look at what goes behind each of these technologies to bring those fantastically real images to the viewer:

    Plasma Television: In the flat panel category, in plasma televisions, a variety of gases like neon argon and xenon emit light and color to the TV screen when they are stimulated by electrical impulses. There is a matrix of miniature phosphor coated gas plasma bubbles, which are powered through electrical impulses that result in the formation of the picture. There are some really wide plasma screens available, exceeding thirty inches, with stunning images with the sharp contrast. Plasma televisions are better than liquid crystal displays because they are faster in terms of response, offer a more wide viewing angle. The picture display quality appears far better.

    LCD Television: Also called liquid crystal display TV, these are also flat panel TVs. The technology works when a solution of liquid crystals is sandwiched between two glass panes. This solution carries electrical charges. A florescent bulb emits white light, which the crystals block and reflect, which results in the picture the viewer sees on the screen. LCD TVs are very popular with an ever-increasing market. They last long, are slim and energy efficient.

    DLP TV - DLP or Digital Lighting Processing technology has come in recently. These projection TVs use a computer chip equipped with innumerable mirrors, which project and then reflect the picture. The picture quality is superior. Today, many home theater systems and entertainment projectors use this technology.

    HDTV or High Definition Television is basically a digital format. A viewer can really enjoy the experience of HDTV when the show is made using high definition technology and broadcast through an HDTV signal via an HDTV TV channel to an HDTV television. There are HD ready TV sets in the market today. These have a screen that can display the HDTV signal. It requires an HDTV receiver/decoder to broadcast the signals.

    Rear Projection TVs These are large-screen TVs that are more reasonably priced than the others, giving the viewer a great option that combines size with price. Most of these support the HDTV format. Rear Projection TVs use different technologies to produce their pictures and this can be CRT, DLP or LCD. They can be thin and light and have to be viewed straight on to get the best effect.

    The great thing about these TVs is their amazing color clarity and life like visuals, making the viewer feel as if she or he is a part of the scene. Market leaders in this field are Panasonic, Toshiba, Hitachi, Samsung, Philips, etc. There is no such thing as the best TV; what really matters is what features matter most to the viewer and consequently what might be a pro for one viewer might well be a con for the other.

    Author: Marc Crohn

    -- Television Projection Reviews

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  • Plasma, TV has vivid colors, fast refresh and great contrast? Plasma TVs are the TVs that mostly likely catch your eye as you stroll down the aisle in your local best buy. Plasma TVs have exceptionally bright, distinct and vibrant colors.

    But as with most good things in life there is a downside to consider. Plasma TVs have high power consumption and a relatively short lifespan. But then again you may well be buying a newer type of higher technology TV yet again in the future. After all having the latest TV technology has become an essential status symbol in many if not most middle class American homes. If you only wanted a TV you could of well gone to Wal-Mart or Costco and purchased a very acceptable picture older CRT TV very inexpensively.

    Some tests have shown that the ability for a plasma display to show true black decreases by 13% over the first four weeks. Over a period of a few years this could show blacks as light grays in your image.

    The high power consumption may not bother you if you don’t mind paying a bit more for your electric bill, but the real issue just as in laptop computers is the amount heat generated and the damage done to these electronic devices and the screen of your new and very expensive plasma TV by that heat.
    .
    The heat comes from the million tiny fluorescent tubes on a heavy glass substrate that produces the image. This design is also part of the longevity issue. The high heat produced in a small area burns out the phosphors sooner than the phosphor on a traditional CRT. And, in tying everything together, this can also result in image burn-in especially on channels that display their logo continuously in the lower right corner.

    LCD TVs are much less expensive than plasma, but also tend not to have pictures that are as sharp or bright. The other downside to LCD displays is that the pixels are relatively slow to change state. Fast moving objects such as a hockey puck or baseball bat get blurred where they might show more crisply on a plasma or good quality CRT.

    Projection TVs are yet another option. Projection TV technology now produces much sharper, more vivid images that in previous years with deeper blacks that rival the CRT, and beat most of the plasma and LCD displays. This is the way to go for display sizes of 50 inches or greater.

    The main drawback for any of the projection technologies is the lamp used as the light source. The typical metal halide projector lamp only lasts 1000 to 2000 hours and can cost several hundred dollars to replace. Longer life span lamps called ultra high performance (UHP) have recently come on the market that use mercury vapor instead of argon and have lifespan ranging from 3,000 to 10,000 hours.

    Most consumers use their TVs on an average basis of 1,000 hours a year. That means that if the bulb is in the range of $ 300 - $ 500 dollars the cost of “running the projection TV” at a rough guide of 1,000 hours of use per bulb is several hundred dollars a year. The projections of bulb longevity are often done in best case not scenarios not the ordinary setup where the homeowner may even impair the ventilation of heat accidentally by TV and furniture placement chosen by the wife for appearance rather than electronic longevity.

    Not so conceptually the projection TV bulbs seem to be very proprietary bulbs sold by the projection TV manufacturer. Bulbs for Sony projection TVs are made and distributed only by Sony. You may find a less expensive bulb say a Hitachi. However it is a judgment call. The Sony bulbs although more expensive are much more popular and easy to find on eBay - even used bulbs. But projection TV bulbs are very fragile and may not survive shipment by mail.

    As with LCD display, manufacturers are moving towards high intensity LED technology to replace lamps and get lifespan measured in years. Of course, that technology is not cheap, but prices should come down as they become more available in the next several years.

    On the horizon we can look forward tothe next tound on new high tech type of TVs- SEDs. What is SED?

    SED is Surface-conduction Electron-emitter Display. These should be coming on the market in about 2008/2009. Japan will probably start seeing them by the end of 2007. They are a flat panel display, much like the LCD displays now, but have characteristics resembling that of the CRT for contrast and image quality. This comes from basis of the design: each pixel is basically a tiny CRT. It uses less energy than plasma since it’s easier to generate an electron beam (as a CRT does) than it is to excite photons in a gas (as the plasma display does).

    There is no production display of SED TVs yet available. As well there is no data yet for other performance or reliability factors.

    In the end enjoy your purchase. You may well purchase a plasma TV now, pay it off, confess you really enjoyed the plasma TV and yet purchase yet again the newer SED TV for your home for its better, more advanced picture and as a status symbol for your home. It never ends.

    Author: Kerry A. Francis

    -- Television Projection Reviews

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  • Have you seen LCD projection TV? No, really. I don’t just mean a picture online or in an advertisement on a normal tube television, but have you actually seen projection TV? It really is completely different that what even the hardest of hardcore couch potatoes have ever witnessed. It is impossible to properly describe the effect of LCD projection TV, but roughly it is to normal TV what the CD is to the cassette tape. Leagues of difference, I say. It is the bee’s knees, the cream in your coffee, the sprinkles on your donut, the…aw, enough. Let’s cut to the chase.

    Big yet sleek and impressive without ostentatiousness, Toshiba has a pair of outstanding 42″ LCD projection TV sets to draw the consumer’s eye. The featured Toshiba LCD TV, the 42″ LCD projection TV, is but one representative of the “Diagonal Cinema Series” bunch. Just under thirty-five hundred dollars (see Toshiba.com for ordering information), this 42″ LCD TV comes replete with Toshiba’s “adaptive LCD projection TV technology,” which makes feasible the addition of innumerable extensions to this LCD projection TV, thereby allowing all your favorite doodads all the benefits of it, up to and including Dolby-based sound systems.

    Speaking of sound systems, have you heard the Sony projection TV line? No, I mean have you really heard of it? Well, it’s Sony and that right there says a lot. Audio has been at the heart of Sony business since time immemorial (okay, the 1950s to be precise), thereby levering projection TV sets against the competition as in other audiovisual fields.

    Sony product information promises that their products will be at center of a complete audio “suite.” Stuff like Focus technology, TruBass and SRS 3-D dot the T’s and cross the I’s of the projection TV experience. It is said that good sound can save an average movie, but poor sound can ruin a great movie. If one of the prime selling points of LCD projection TV in general is the technology’s presentation of movies, Sony LCD projection TV should be a must on any serious TV shopper’s priority list. See Sonystyle.com for the entire LCD TV line, not to mention a tantalizing description of SRS WOW technology; you can rest well assured that this will warm the movie goer’s cockles.

    Article written by Ryan Tenney.

    Author: Bivan

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