Source - http://www.usatoday.com/
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Category - Hotels In Northern California
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By -
Category - Hotels In Northern California
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
Hotels In Northern California |
The OLED TV competition is heating up.
Samsung has joined LG
Electronics in offering the long-awaited organic light-emitting diode
TVs. Samsung's new 55-inch curved display, priced at $9,000 (actually
$8,999.99), is shipping to retailers and is also available to order on
Samsung.com.
The TV and electronics maker, which, like LG, is
based in South Korea, had originally priced the set to arrive in the
U.S. at $15,000 — the same price as that of LG's curved OLED display
that began arriving in stores last month.
Samsung says it improved its manufacturing process enough to yield
displays more efficiently and decided to drop the price, undercutting LG
in the process.
While still pricey, the $9,000 price tag could
help Samsung gain OLED market share, which, in turn, could lead to LG
cutting its OLED price, says Richard Doherty of The Envisioneering
Group. "It makes it easier to sell it to a spouse or put it on a credit
card," he says. "I'm sure we'll see LG do something to bridge the gap or
beat it."
Samsung's set has a unique MultiView feature that lets
two people watch different programming simultaneously on the display
while wearing 3-D glasses. "Some of us at Samsung call it 'the marriage
saver' because my wife and I can be sitting on the couch watching two
different programs on the same OLED TV," says David Das, vice president
of home entertainment for Samsung Electronics America.
Each person
has personal ear bud headphones built into the 3-D glasses (two pairs
come with the set) that deliver individual audio streams to the viewer.
The
half-inch thick display, like the new LG OLED TV, has a concave shape.
"It actually mimics that of an arena or amphitheater," Das says.
Consumers
have coveted OLED TVs since they first were shown more than five years
ago, because the super-thin displays reproduce super-saturated colors,
ultra-distinct blacks and whites and virtually no motion blur. But they
have been hard to manufacture.
As few as 20,000 OLED displays may
be shipped globally this year, estimates DisplaySearch analyst Ken Park.
He expects that to grow to about 400,000 in 2014, before approaching 2
million in 2015. "Consumers may find it difficult to pay for hugely
expensive OLED TVs, so volume will be limited until mass production is
fully stabilized," Park says.
But OLED's promise remains because
of the picture quality. "The images were very bright, well above what
we've seen from any plasma TV, so you get an unparalleled contrast range
that makes images pop off the screen," says Jim Willcox, senior
electronics editor at Consumer Reports, who got to test the display.
Willcox
calls the display "arguably the best all-around TV we've ever tested."
He's looking forward to putting LG's competing curved display through
its paces.
But because of the high price and difficulty of
manufacturing, he says, "all OLED TV manufacturers face formidable
challenges before these sets can become a mainstream choice for
consumers."
Samsung also announced that retailers were now
offering two new Ultra HD displays, a 55-inch model ($5,500) and 65-inch
model ($7,500). Consumers could be overwhelmed by choice with new OLED
and Ultra HD sets joining traditional big-screen flat-panel displays at
retail, so Samsung will have detailed descriptions in stores.
"We
feel that each of these technologies meets a certain consumer's needs,"
Das says. "Ultra HD offers the highest resolution, four times that of
full HD; and in OLED, it is this amazing picture quality. It stops
people in their tracks."
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