|
12 March 2007 6:30 by Dave "Davedough" Horvath
| 6 comments
Electronics manufacturer, Philips has decided to drop the plans to include the fluorescent stroboscopic lights that illuminate many of their flat screen televisions and provide much of the clean up duties for getting rid of motion blur and smear that tend to plague those types of TVs. Instead, Philips has decided to focus on LED backlights that give a more precise burst of light, take up less space and are more efficient to run.
Current LCD TVs emitt a constant stream of light, while Philips' plans with their LED backed televisions actually send out small bursts of light which trick the human eye into thinking the picture is brighter and sharper than it really is. While their previous fluorescent technology, dubbed Aptura was touted as a major advance in technology and a potential cash cow for the lighting division, Philips has since rescinded their support for such technology.
"If we want to continue developing this backlighting technology, we'll have to make new investments. At the same time, LEDs (light emitting diodes) are getting ripe for the market and they enable thinner TV sets, so we've chosen to invest in those," says a Philips spokeswoman.
Philips actually unveiled its flickering backlight technology some time ago and it is featured in several high end flat panel televisions, however it may take some time for televisions equipped with this technology to reach a cheap enough asking price for mainstream consumption.
Source:
Reuters
Permalink to this article
| |
Related articles:
Philips developing smart PVR system (4 September 2007)
HD DVD ahead in Europe for now (8 March 2007)
Broadcom develops 65nm advanced video decoder chip (6 March 2007)
Toshiba pushes 51GB HD DVD disc (27 February 2007)
Virgin and Buena Vista strike HD content deal for UK (18 February 2007)
Homes with HDTV to treble by 2011 (9 February 2007)
Amazon and TiVo team up for movie downloads (7 February 2007)
HD DVD rips available for illegal download (16 January 2007)
|
|
|
| Discuss this article! |
| ZippyDSM (AfterDawn Addict) 12 March 2007 8:17 |
|
|
sounds good but,are leds better?
|
| hughjars (Inactive) 12 March 2007 8:59 |
|
|
They have good stability and long lives (if the voltage/current is nice & constant) zippy.
They could be a fair 'solution' (but backlighting itself strikes me as a less than ideal method of doing this).
Personally I'm interested in the latest OLED TVs which do away with the backlight and all of it's 'issues' altogether.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 12 March 2007 9:00
|
| ZippyDSM (AfterDawn Addict) 12 March 2007 9:11 |
|
Originally posted by hughjars: They have good stability and long lives (if the voltage/current is nice & constant) zippy.
They could be a fair 'solution' (but backlighting itself strikes me as a less than ideal method of doing this).
Personally I'm interested in the latest OLED TVs which do away with the backlight and all of it's 'issues' altogether.
got any links? ^^
|
| hughjars (Inactive) 12 March 2007 10:18 |
|
|
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 12 March 2007 10:21
|
| crof27 (Newbie) 22 March 2007 4:30 |
|
|
slightly off topic, i just wish the tv mnfctrs would get their heads together and decide then design wot is the best way forward for tv's either plasma or led coz both of them sem to have their plus and minus points surely there must be some sort of easy medium between them that works best cos so far my old tube tv seems to work better all round on picture ie: no blurring or lose of definition in colours than plasma/led screens. to me it seems like a step back before we go forward.
|
| ZippyDSM (AfterDawn Addict) 22 March 2007 4:43 |
|
|
hughjars
I'd rather have the model in the background :D
|
|
|
Latest newsLatest news from AfterDawn.com. Spotify now available on Symbian phones 23 Nov, 2009 Sony confirms 'premium level' for PSN 23 Nov, 2009 | 11 comments Nintendo announces DSi holiday bundles 23 Nov, 2009 iPhone worm can steal banking data 23 Nov, 2009 | 4 comments Roku adds 10 new content channels 23 Nov, 2009 | 5 comments Google Navigation hacked to work outside of US, and on G1 23 Nov, 2009 | 2 comments DSi LL launches in Japan 23 Nov, 2009 | 1 comment China Unicom has bold expectations for iPhone 23 Nov, 2009 | 2 comments Windows 8 coming in 2012? 22 Nov, 2009 | 29 comments Hulu will be dead in two years, says Verizon CEO 22 Nov, 2009 | 7 comments Netflix to stream IFC films 22 Nov, 2009 | 4 comments Wal-Mart selling $78 Blu-ray player on Black Friday, other great deals 22 Nov, 2009 | 6 comments
More news... 
Search for headlinesSearch through our news archive. 
Latest threadsRecently updated discussion threads. More... 
Last week's most popular software downloads
Most popular devicesLast week's most popular products in our product comparison service. More products... 
Top linksMost popular links - Blasteroids.com
Download game trailers, demos and more - TorrentReactor.Net
The most active torrents on the web - Digital-Digest
Latest DivX, XviD, DVD, Blu-Ray, HD DVD News - OpenSubtitles.org
download DivX subtitles from the biggest open database - CDRInfo.com
The Hardware Authority - DVDHelp.us
DVD help, tutorials, FAQ, and very popular free help forum! - dvd ripper
rip DVD to VCD, DivX, MPEG, SVCD, AVI easily and quickly. - Torrentreactor.TO
The most active torrents on the web

|