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Laser color television (laser TV), or laser color video display, is a type of television that utilizes two or more individually modulated optical (laser) rays of different colors to produce a combined spot that is scanned and projected across the image plane by a polygon-mirror system or less effectively by optoelectronic means to produce a color-television display.
Laser TV is generally not yet available from many manufacturers. Claims have been made on television broadcasts such as KRON 4 News' Coverage of Laser TV from October 2006, [26] but no consumer-grade laser television sets have made any significant improvements in reducing any form of motion artifacts since that time. One recent development in ...
Hisense's Giant 136-inch TV. Hisense is the frontrunner in the massive TV for consumers space race. Last year, I reviewed the larger than life 110 inch QLED, and it was remarkable.Now, it's ...
Laser TV (Quantum dot, Liquid crystal) Arasor, Mitsubishi, HDI 3D: On January 7, 2008, at an event associated with the Consumer Electronics Show 2008, Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America, a key player in high-performance red-laser [4] and large-screen HDTV markets, unveiled their first commercial Laser TV, a 65" 1080p model.
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Laser-powered phosphor display (LPD) is a large-format display technology similar to the cathode-ray tube (CRT). Prysm, Inc., a video wall designer and manufacturer in Silicon Valley, California, invented and patented [ 1 ] the LPD technology.
A thinner and lighter LCD or DLP projection TV in a home cinema. A projection television uses a projector to create a small image or video from a video signal and magnify this image onto a viewable screen. The projector uses a bright beam of light and a lens system to project the image to a much larger size.