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TFT BOE Chengdu China [51] gen 4.5 TFT BOE Fuzhou China [51] gen 8.5 TFT BOE Chongqing China gen 8.5 TFT BOE Fuqin China gen 8.5 TFT TCL: Shenzhen China [57] [58] 9 2019(planned) gen 11 [59] [60] TFT, IGZO [61] 90,000 [62] TCL gen 8.5 TFT [61] TCL gen 6 TFT [61] MYIR Tech Limited Shenzhen, China 2019 TFT [61] LG Display: South Korea gen 10.5 ...
In December 2010, the EU fined LG Display €215 million for its part in an LCD price fixing scheme. [7] Other companies were also fined for a combined total of €648.9 million, including Chimei Innolux, AU Optronics, Chunghwa Picture Tubes Ltd., and HannStar Display Corp. [8] LG Display has said it is considering appealing the fine.
TFT LCDs are used in television sets, computer monitors, mobile phones, video game systems, personal digital assistants, navigation systems, projectors, [2] and dashboards in some automobiles and in medium to high end motorcycles.
In 1988, Sharp demonstrated a 14-inch, active-matrix, full-color, full-motion TFT-LCD. This led to Japan launching an LCD industry, which developed large-size LCDs, including TFT computer monitors and LCD televisions. [55] Epson developed the 3LCD projection technology in the 1980s, and licensed it for use in projectors in 1988. [56]
The 2.1-inch Epson ET-10 [18] Epson Elf was the first color LCD pocket TV, released in 1984. [19] In 1988, a Sharp research team led by engineer T. Nagayasu demonstrated a 14-inch full-color LCD, [12] [20] which convinced the electronics industry that LCD would eventually replace CRTs as the standard television display technology. [12]
The TFT-LCD (Flat Panel) Antitrust Litigation [1] was a United States class-action lawsuit regarding the worldwide conspiracy to coordinate the prices of Thin-Film Transistor-Liquid Crystal Display (TFT-LCD) panels, which are used to make laptop computers, computer monitors and televisions, between 1999 and 2006.
A Pixel Qi screen installed in an OLPC XO laptop operating in reflective mode. The screen is in grayscale mode and is not retro-illuminated. A Pixel Qi screen installed in an OLPC XO laptop operating in transmissive mode.
In 1973, T. Peter Brody, J. A. Asars and G. D. Dixon at Westinghouse Research Laboratories developed a CdSe (cadmium selenide) TFT, which they used to demonstrate the first CdSe thin-film-transistor liquid-crystal display (TFT LCD). [31] [36] The Westinghouse group also reported on operational TFT electroluminescence (EL) in 1973, using CdSe. [37]