108″ LCD Television
At the International Consumer Electronics Show, Sharp Electronics Corp. took the crown for introducing the world’s largest, a behemoth 108-inch liquid-crystal display that most people probably couldn’t fit through their front door.
Sharp and its rivals also announced technological improvements to how LCDs render high-speed movement, cutting down on the staccato image trails that have so far made LCDs less smooth than plasma models.
“LCD TVs have become larger and are now competing aggressively in screen-size segments that were formerly the exclusive domain of plasma and rear-projection televisions,” Sharp chief executive Toshihiko Fujimoto said. “There’s no question that LCD TV is fast becoming the dominant flat-panel technology.”
Last year, South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. unveiled what was then the world’s largest flat TV, a 102-inch plasma model.
Sharp and several rival brands such as Samsung, LG Electronics Inc., Toshiba Corp., Royal Philips Electronics NV, Sony Corp. and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co.’s Panasonic said they doubled the frame rate per second on LCD screens from 60 to 120, which makes fast movement seem to go by more smoothly.
Toshiba and Sharp explained this was done by calculating what should go between two frames.
Sales of flat panel TVs in the United States are expected to total 13.5 million in 2006, with three-quarters made up of LCD TVs and the rest plasma, the group said. Total sales are expected to reach nearly 20 million this year and more than 25 million next year, with LCDs continuing to dominate.