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Thursday, May 11, 2006
HD-ILA Televisions

HD-ILA televisions were developed by the world’s most brilliant and dedicated engineers. Every new feature is designed to become the perfect complement to every existing feature. And, at the same time, our engineers continually strive to improve upon all of our proven and existing features so that each generation of JVC televisions is even more outstanding than preceding ones.
posted by ZanZiBaRi @ 5:31 AM   |
Complete the HD Universe JVC Technology

Now that you have been introduced to the top-of-the-line HD microdisplays, take one last moment to meet some other members of our HD Universe. JVC is the ONLY ONE consumer electronics company that offers our customers the ability to receive HD satellite television, record (and playback) HD content, create their own HD home movies, and view any HD video source on an HD-ILA television.
posted by ZanZiBaRi @ 5:28 AM   |
HD Technology Trends
HD Technology Trends
New advances will push HD images into the corporate world.
Sony PCS-HG90
With more than 20 million HDTV screens sold to the domestic home market by end of 2005, most of us have experienced the advantages of high-definition television. But in the corporate enterprise communications arena, HD has been a hard sell until recently. After all, large standard-definition screens have been commonplace for so long in corporate boardrooms, training centers, digital signage installations, and even lobby displays that we have all become accustomed to them. Presentations needing really fine detail have usually been shown on computer-generated VGA screens (at least since IBM introduced the Video Graphics Array resolution standard in 1987).
Now that SXGA resolutions of 1280×1024 and higher are readily available on even modestly priced laptops, most designers and technicians already work with data-dense screen displays. More importantly, since standard-definition video infrastructure already exists, why should a corporation make the upgrade? The broadcast networks were forced to take the plunge into digital transmission by FCC mandate, but until recently corporations had been facing massive capital outlays if they wanted to catch up.


With recent developments in codecs, disk and hard drive storage, and digital signage systems, however, all that is changing. This Technology Trends article looks at some of the new technologies that will soon enable HD to spread its gloriously dense images and crystal-clear audio throughout corporate America, educational institutions, houses of worship, and anywhere people need to see what only high-definition pictures — and their associated multichannel digital audio — can convey.
posted by ZanZiBaRi @ 5:11 AM   |
Panasonic TH- 58PX600U and TH-58PX60U

Everyone wants a plasma unless they're into LCD or they've got the greens for home cinema. Plasma is sweet technology and produces glowing picture quality worthy of its name. Panasonic is raising its game in plasma tvs by unleashing two new 58-inch models, the TH-58PX600U and TH-58PX60U. They both offer 1366x768 resolution, a 10,000:1 contrast ratio, HDMI and EZ-Sync universal remote. Both models also have built-in HD and standard tuners and SD card slots. The TH-58PX600U adds CableCARD and PC support. Both models are due out this summer, with the TH-58PX60U going for $5,499/£3140 and the TH-58PX600U for $5,999/£3430. Go out and indulge yourself, you only live twice!
posted by ZanZiBaRi @ 5:10 AM   |
HD Technology Sky Box
High Definition television, or HDTV, gives viewers crystal-clear pictures integrated with Dolby Digital 5.1 channel surround sound - the entertainment experience that has been imagined but was never possible on standard analog televisions. HDTV reproduces theater-quality sights and sound by digitizing TV programming, allowing it to be transmitted and received the same way that a DVD player can reproduce movies with big-screen quality effects.
With DISH Network, the leader in HD satellite TV, it's easier than ever to upgrade to HDTV. All you need to receive lifelike HD programming from DISH Network is:
An antenna pointed at DISH Network's HD satellite
An HD satellite receiver
An HD compatible television
posted by ZanZiBaRi @ 5:05 AM   |