http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=18269
Apparently Mitsubishi have mastered the process of getting the pixels to turn on and off faster, improving response times to 1-5ms depending whether the pixel is on or off..
:rockon:
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http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=18269
Apparently Mitsubishi have mastered the process of getting the pixels to turn on and off faster, improving response times to 1-5ms depending whether the pixel is on or off..
:rockon:
the equivalent to 200 frames per second minimum?
isn't that somewhat faster than the best CRTs?
very sweet, but i be the price would be astronomical
Yup :)Quote:
Originally Posted by directhex
Coupled with OLED tech and the higher resolutions of some of the newer panels (Stop sticking them all in blimmin laptops!), the CRT looks like it's heading towards the bin faster than ever..
Now all we need is the colour calibration (OLED should help with that a bit) working on a bit and about the only advantage left of crt is the better multi-resolution handling..
Roll on HDTV OLED widescreen displays :D
Very likely, but as with everything the price will drop eventually, and filter down to the lower end products.Quote:
Originally Posted by mr_anderson187
That said, it's not actually in production yet, so depending on the compatibility with existing tft tech and yields it might not be quite so bad. (The 12ms panels aren't astronomic compared to the 16ms versions..)
The problem is usually with yeilds. I used to work for Mitsubishi and I was fortunate enough to see some of their pre-production plasma TVs. These things were absolutely stunning - the picture was better than any CRT I'd ever seen. The colours were vivid and the dark tones very natural.Quote:
very sweet, but i be the price would be astronomical
However, Mitsubishi required a yeild of at least 14% and the plasma displays could only be manufactuared at a yeild of 9% even after a lot of work so they were never released. :(
I assume by the fact that they've made a public press release that they're happy with the yeilds now. I expect them to be pretty keenly priced. :)
I see your point but it will also means that other tft monitors (12-16ms ones) will come down in proce, pretty krappy that i bought one just before this about a week ago, but should be class for games nonetheless
Well, I'd expect them to be used in the lcd tv's first of all, as the picture with most of those is just dreadful..
Sorry ... I don't understand. Yields? What are they then?Quote:
Originally Posted by Aaron
X number of screens are made, Y nummber of screens are binned as unsuitable for sale, (X-Y)/X is the yield.
i think 25% is the standard for tfts these days
Resposne time is not every thing.
I got to test a AG Neovo F-419 out, it's listed has a 25ms pannel but it performs like a 16ms pannel. The colours are great, the blacks ...black ! but still no where near the standard of my sony 21"
I won't be giving up my £100 19" Mitsubishi CRT for a long time yet, at least till TFT's get the same quality and response at 1600x1200 (it hurts when I come to work, stuck with 1024x768) and a very similar price tag!