Friday, May 11, 2012

Mfarhanonline:Is Plasma TV Dead?

Fav Tag:

Mfarhanonline Social Media News: Panasonic , one of the last major TV manufacturers to champion plasma TVs, is now probably regretting that decision. The company just posted a $10 billion loss for the year, and one of its biggest losers is the plasma TV category, where sales fell way short of expectations. Plasma TV sales only hit about 59% of what the company had predicted. Revenue on Panasonic’s balance sheet from plasma sets was $3.5 billion, down from $6 billion the year before. Once the hottest kind of TV you could get, the plasma TV has seen tough times in recent years. Many manufacturers (notably, Pioneer ) have abandoned the technology, noting a lack of consumer demand. After Panasonic acquired Pioneer’s industry-leading plasma tech in 2009, it began a valiant effort to promote and market the advantages of plasma TV. Looking at the numbers today, it clearly hasn’t worked. The question remains: Why has plasma display technology fallen so far out of favor with TV buyers? A combination of factors in the industry and the consumer market have conspired to shut plasma TVs out of showrooms — and consumer living rooms. “Plasma is a great technology that is suffering,” says Raymond Soneira, president of DisplayMate , a display-analysis company. “It has some advantages over LCDs but also has some disadvantages as well.” On the plus side, plasmas can create much darker blacks, have excellent viewing angles, more accurate color and no motion blur, Soneira says. However, LCDs are much brighter, which can be an advantage in well-lit rooms, which tends to be the case at retail. They also don’t weigh as much and consumer less power than plasma sets. Besides those technical details, there’s the perception that LCD technology is newer, and therefore superior. It’s not — LCD screens had been around ! for year s before the first plasma sets came out, but LCD technology hadn’t been adapted for larger displays until the last decade. Big-screen LCDs came to places like Best Buy well after plasma models, though, so to consumers it was the “hot new thing” — a mindset that LCD makers such as Samsung and Sharp were only too happy to aggressively exploit. SEE ALSO: Panasonic's 103-Inch 3D Plasma Could Be Yours for $100,000 As the industry began to shift toward LCD, the technology has improved greatly since its debut, dulling if not altogether nullifying plasma sets’ many onscreen advantages. Meanwhile, the manufacturing of panels consolidated around just a few large-scale companies, making LCDs cheaper to produce for everyone. There was also the dreaded “burn-in” issue , where customers believed watching the same material continuously (like a headline scroll on a news channel) would permanently “burn” the image into a plasma screen. It’s a real issue, but it actually takes much longer use than any normal person would watch a single image. In addition, new features on plasma sets all but eliminate the problem. Still, burn-in got a lot of press, and the damage was done. Finally, there’s the simple fact that people don’t buy TVs that often. At this point, pretty much everyone who was going to buy an HDTV has done so, and novel technologies like 3D aren’t doing much to convince consumers to upgrade again. Even Panasonic’s LCD numbers fell about 30% short of expectations, and the size of the TV market has been shrinking from a peak of 35 million sets sold in 2009, according to the Consumer Electronics Association. There’s clearly a general cooling of the TV market in general. However, the falling demand for TVs has hit plasma particularly hard. It’s a shame, because even though LCD tech has shown a lot of improvement, plasma displays have inherent advantages, primarily because the tech doesn’t require a backlight —! unlike LCDs, which twist crystals in individual pixels to affect the light passing through, plasma pixels illuminate themselves. Before Pioneer stopped making plasma TVs, it had demonstrated models with theoretically infinite contrast and razor-thin designs , showing off the benefits of a plasma display. Why do you think plasma TV is on life support? Have your say in the comments. Image courtesy of iStockphoto , EdStock More About: HDTV , LCD , Panasonic , plasma , trending For more Tech coverage: Follow Mfarhanonline Tech on Twitter Become a Fan on Facebook Subscribe to the Tech channel Download our free apps for Android , Mac , iPhone and iPad Social Media reviews series maintain by Mayya

Share and Enjoy: Print Digg Sphinn del.icio.us Facebook Mixx Google Bookmarks Blogplay Add to favorites BarraPunto Bitacoras.com BlinkList blogmarks Blogosphere News blogtercimlap connotea Current Design Float Diggita Diigo DotNetKicks DZone eKudos email Fark Faves Fleck FriendFeed FSDaily Global Grind Gwar HackerNews Haohao HealthRanker HelloTxt Hemidemi Hyves Identi.ca IndianPad Internetmedia Kirtsy laaik.it LaTafanera LinkaGoGo LinkArena LinkedIn Linkter Live Meneame MisterWong MisterWong.DE MOB MSN Reporter muti MyShare MySpace N4G Netvibes Netvouz NewsVine NuJIJ PDF Ping.fm Posterous Propeller QQ书签 Ratimarks Rec6 Reddit RSS Scoopeo Segnalo SheToldMe Simpy Slashdot Socialogs SphereIt StumbleUpon Suggest to Techmeme via Twitter Technorati ThisNext Tipd Tumblr Twitter Upnews viadeo FR Webnews.de Webride Wikio Wikio FR Wikio IT Wists Wykop Xerpi Yahoo! Bookmarks Yahoo! Buzz Yigg 豆瓣 豆瓣九点

http://www.mfarhanonline.com/2012051153619/is-plasma-tv-dead/

0 comments :

Popular Posts