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วันศุกร์ที่ 28 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2555

Samsung PS-51E8000 for 3D Plasma TV


Samsung PS-51E8000 for 3D Plasma TV
 
 
Plasma TV may be the only option for a lot of the production is only 3 brands only. Of course, one of them is Samsung. Time ago. To guarantee its ability to produce innovative Samsung's Plasma TV with outstanding features not only. What can be expected. Not only the quality of the pictures. It looks to be the main manufacturers have long maintained. If the Plasma TV will give you a list of the favorite past time. It can not be overlooked PS-51D8000 as a product of the units in 2011 is on pace to 2012, the Samsung has introduced PS-51E8000 market to see if it continues.
 
Brand.
Samsung.
Model.PS-51E8000.
Size.51 ".
Native Resolution.1920 x 1080.
Panel Type.Clear Panel.
3D Playback.Yes. 
(Active Shutter Glasses).
2D to 3D.Yes.
Video Processor.3D HyperReal Engine.
Frame Interpolation.-.
Design.Plasma +1.
HDMI.Three.
USB.Three.
Internet Connection.WiFi Integrated, LAN.
Internet & Network.Samsung Smart TV Content / DLNA.
Price.$2,258
 


       The design features of the PS-51E8000 continue to use the Plasma +1 Plasma +1 background is in the details ... this is what I would not do it again.Although it looks the same. The same as the year before. But it is different in some small details that are visible on the screen, for example, the tone color of the Titan. Black (as in the Silver), so the new style is a "dark centers nonsense" than the material the screen seems to change. If I remember correctly. I vaguely remember that it was the first real metal. But not sure about the new material. The top surface. Similar to the synthetic material. It has a texture similar to Hairline Aluminium (but not the Hairline Aluminium), they do it superbly. If you do not feel the difference.Though most users are accustomed to the TV via remote control over. The control buttons on the TV, it is necessary in some situations. This is another one of the new generation. Different from the original ... In the first version (PS-51D8000) is a touch button control. Acrylic straight edge along the bottom.

But a new generation (PS-51E8000) Touch button above. Have gone ... I wonder if the dizziness is unlikely that contaminants. How to change the channel. Or lower the volume on the TV? However, Samsung has modified the design of the various control functions. Put on the new TV. Rather than the position. One button, one function. (Of course, there must be a button), it becomes a "one-button control of all".

This button is the same button that switches power (as if looking from the front of the TV. The remote IR sensor is located under the rear edge of the indentation Acrylic Insert) say that. "One button controls" on Samsung TV which is integrated with the keypad. "Small joystick" buttons together for this one. So everything is acting as switches Power / Standby. And control other basic functions of the TV like a - Decrease the volume change channels, etc. The program source.

Asked one button. How many such acts? The answer is when the TV is in Standby, press the button once to turn it on. Press one of the menu appears on the screen (as shown) and then to the "rocking" a 4-way joystick to move the cursor and "click" it will be a function that ... Although the process is a little different. What is important is not complicated, but it did break new ground.


Plasma TV is the top level. I have a built-in web camera already. Positioned at the top center of the screen as the camera is always important to work with a concept. Smart. Interaction. , to the Samsung Smart TV with "attitude" as the Samsung features a special focus this year. (Details will be discussed during the next several).

As part of the installation of the camera. Different point of LED TV is the area of ​​the screen, the more I see that the Plasma TV frame thickness (as opposed to the borderless OneDesign of LED TV), but it allows the embedded camera to a plasma TV is harmony and harmony is. must be filed with LCD projection TV

Another point is the location and the remote IR sensor positioned near the power switch at the bottom left corner. (As well as the design of the previous year), while an LED TV remote IR sensor on the camera (above) at the 2 test was used to do it a little at a point remote from the Resolution. Point to another remote?


Full back. Wherever they are. Placed on the right side. Close to the position in the module Smart Evolution Kit (with sticker cover is black) as a way to upgrade the capabilities of the Samsung TV.Power connector is a standard IEC power cord to unplug the switch to high quality.

 

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 27 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2555

Plasma TV(Plasma display)


 Plasma TV display


A plasma display panel (PDP) is a type of flat panel display common to large TV displays 30 inches (76 cm) or larger. They are called "plasma" displays because the technology utilizes small cells containing electrically charged ionized gases, or what are in essence chambers more commonly known as fluorescent lamps.


Plasma displays are bright (1,000 lux or higher for the module), have a wide color gamut, and can be produced in fairly large sizes—up to 3.8 metres (150 in) diagonally. They have a very low-luminance "dark-room" black level compared with the lighter grey of the unilluminated parts of an LCD screen

 LED-backlit LCD televisions have been developed to reduce this distinction. The display panel itself is about 6 cm (2.4 in) thick, generally allowing the device's total thickness (including electronics) to be less than 10 cm (3.9 in). Plasma displays use as much power per square meter as a CRT or an AMLCD television.

Power consumption varies greatly with picture content, with bright scenes drawing significantly more power than darker ones – this is also true of CRTs. Typical power consumption is 400 watts for a 127 cm (50 in) screen. 200 to 310 watts for a 127 cm (50 in) display when set to cinema mode. Most screens are set to "shop" mode by default, which draws at least twice the power (around 500–700 watts) of a "home" setting of less extreme brightness.

Panasonic has greatly reduced power consumption.Panasonic states that PDPs will consume only half the power of their previous series of plasma sets to achieve the same overall brightness for a given display size. The lifetime of the latest generation of plasma displays is estimated at 100,000 hours of actual display time, or 27 years at 10 hours per day.

This is the estimated time over which maximum picture brightness degrades to half the original value.

LED-backlit LCD display

 LED-backlit LCD display

 

An LED-backlit LCD display is a flat panel display which uses LED backlighting instead of the cold cathode fluorescent (CCFL) backlighting used by most other LCDs.

LED-backlit LCD TVs use the same TFT LCD (thin film transistor liquid crystal display) technologys as CCFL-backlit LCD TVs. Picture quality is primarily based on TFT LCD technology, independent of backlight type. While not an LED display, a television using this display is called an “LED TV” by some manufacturers and suppliers.[1] In the UK, the Advertising Standards Authority has made it clear in correspondence that it does not object to the use of the term “LED TV”, but requires it to be explained in advertising

Three types of LED may be used:

  •     White-edge LEDs around the rim of the screen, using a special diffusion panel to spread the light evenly behind the screen (the most common use)
  •     LED array behind the screen, whose brightness is not controlled individually
  •     Dynamic “local dimming” array of LEDs, controlled individually (or in clusters) to achieve a modulated backlight pattern


Welcome to Liquid-crystal display televisions (LCD TV)

 

Liquid-crystal display televisions (LCD TV)

 

Liquid-crystal display televisions (LCD TV) are television sets that use LCD display technology to produce images. LCD televisions are thinner and lighter than cathode ray tube (CRTs) of similar display size, and are available in much larger sizes. When manufacturing costs fell, this combination of features made LCDs practical for television receivers.

In 2007, LCD televisions surpassed sales of CRT-based televisions worldwide for the first time,[citation needed] and their sales figures relative to other technologies are accelerating. LCD TVs are quickly displacing the only major competitors in the large-screen market, the plasma display panel and rear-projection television. LCDs are, by far, the most widely produced and sold television display type.

LCDs also have a variety of disadvantages. Other technologies address these weaknesses, including organic light-emitting diodes (OLED), FED and SED, but as of 2011 none of these have entered widespread production.

 

 High-definition

It was the slow standardization of high definition television that first produced a market for new television technologies. In particular, the wider 16:9 aspect ratio of the new material was difficult to build using CRTs; ideally a CRT should be perfectly circular in order to best contain its internal vacuum, and as the aspect ratio becomes more rectangular it becomes more difficult to make the tubes. At the same time, the much higher resolutions these new formats offered were lost at smaller screen sizes, so CRTs faced the twin problems of becoming larger and more rectangular at the same time. LCDs of the era were still not able to cope with fast-moving images, especially at higher resolutions, and from the mid-1990s the plasma display was the only real offering in the high resolution space.

Through the halting introduction of HDTV in the mid-1990s into the early 2000s, plasma displays were the primary high-definition display technology. However, their high cost, both manufacturing and on the street, meant that older technologies like CRTs maintained a footprint in spite of their disadvantages. LCD, however, was widely considered to be unable to scale into the same space, and it was widely believed that the move to high-definition would push it from the market entirely.

This situation changed rapidly. Contrary to early optimism, plasma displays never saw the massive economies of scale that were expected, and remained expensive. Meanwhile, LCD technologies like Overdrive started to address their ability to work at television speeds. Initially produced at smaller sizes, fitting into the low-end space that plasmas could not fill, LCDs started to experience the economies of scale that plasmas failed to achieve. By 2004, 32" models were widely available, 42" sets were becoming common, and much larger prototypes were being demonstrated.

 

The type of TV



Name

Size

Ratio

Abbreviation

Common name.

Low Definition Television.

480 × 320.

3: 2.

LDTV (320p).

High-definition televisions. (Now deprecated).

Standard Definition Television.

640 × 480.

4: 3.

SDTV (480p).

Standard definition TV. (Used in some countries).

Enhanced Definition Television.

640 × 480.

4: 3.

EDTV (480p).

Standard resolution calls scenery. (Now deprecated).

High Definition Television.

1920 × 1080.

16: 9.

HDTV (1080p).

Call scenery in high definition. (Used in some countries).

Quad Full High Definition Television.

3840 × 2160.

16: 9.

QHDTV (2160p).

Call scenery very high resolution. (Television format is going to happen in the future).

Super Hi-Vision Television.

7680 × 4320.

16: 9.

SHVTV (4320p).

Call up the scenery. (Television format is going to happen in the future).