Fujitsu will sell a majority of its stake in a 50-50 plasma display joint venture with Hitachi, the companies announced Wednesday. Through the deal--revealed amid falling margins and an increasingly ...
A Japanese display start-up is well on the way to commercializing a 3-meter wide flexible plasma display and expects the first models to appear next year. The 125-inch display is made using a ...
In the ever-expanding arena of large-display technology, is plasma here to stay? “Plasma displays, I think, are a very awkward technology,” James Jaskie, chief scientist at Motorola’s Microelectronics ...
Plasma displays were once the creme-de-la-creme of television technology. With deep blacks and great colour, they could rival CRTs at a time when a lot of the LCD technology at the time was often seen ...
BOSTON, Mass. &#151 Like the Hatfields and McCoys, liquid crystal and plasma displays renewed their long-standing rivalry at the Society for Information Display business conference here Monday. Market ...
TOKYO (Reuters) - Consumer electronics maker Pioneer Corp said it would fall into the red for the fourth straight year on costs to scrap production of plasma displays as it rejigs its strategy in the ...
Tokyo — The oversupply that characterized the plasma display panel market last year has given way to a period of balance, halting a trend that had seen prices erode 30 to 40 percent. Pricing declines ...
LAS VEGAS — Plasma screens just keep getting bigger, and Panasonic today showed the prototype of a new 150-in. plasma display that the company says is the largest flat-panel display in the world.
According to Sony, strong picture performance, a popular screen size and a reasonable price point contributed to making the KE42TS2 the top-selling plasma display panel on market researcher firm The ...
SEOUL, July 1 (Reuters) - Samsung SDI Co Ltd said on Tuesday that it will shut down its plasma panel production business, citing the decline in overall demand for plasma display panel televisions.
We know that LCD monitors display a given image line by line, generally from top to bottom ("raster-scan" display). This explains tearing if the image changes during the scanning process (mostly in ...