Prysm Develops New HDTV Technology
A new TV technology may yet offer another slew of HD video entertainment improvements and this should signal another shift from the already impressive 3D era people are raving about to date. The new technology is currently being developed by Prysm and is called laser phosphor display or LPD.
The new HDTV technology boasts of lower power consumption and the ability to display quad HD and 3D HD. The new TV sets will be able to bounce laser beams off to phosphor pixels on TV sets which are made of glass and plastic thereby delivering crisp resolution via big and small HDTV screens.
To get the ball rolling on this new technology, Prysm will be demonstrating the new LPD concept in Europe when they start showing off their jumbo trons. This will be followed by the private consumer market focus.
The power consumption level is said to be a tenth of what plasma TVs consume, something attributed to the processors which manage the lasers used.
However, one thing that these new HDTVs may have to work on is the overall size (it has a bulky rear end). As everyone is already cool with the thin structure of LCD TVs we have at the moment, I doubt people would want to revert to the old projection-style TV sets to avoid eating up too much space.
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Give it time and manufactures will be able to make them slimmer, my old sony lcd I had wasnt wall mountable and I bought it only 5 years ago. Give it five years and people are gonna be talking about laser tvs the way people did when they first saw a plasma.