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In 2001, the FD Trinitron WEGA series had become the top selling television model in the United States. [3] By 2003, over 40 million sets had been sold worldwide. [ 4 ] As the television market shifted towards LCD technology, Sony eventually ended production of the Trinitron in Japan in 2004, and in the US in 2006.
In the Trinitron design, the problem was greatly simplified, [how?] requiring changes only for large screen sizes, and only on a line-by-line basis. For this reason, Trinitron systems are easier to focus than shadow masks, and generally had a sharper image. [citation needed] This was a major selling point of the Trinitron design for much of its ...
Model Size Resolution Light source Contrast HDMI Notes References KDF-37H1000 37" 1280x720 Projection 2 [22] KDF-50E3000 50" 1080p: Projection 2 [23] KDS-50A2020 50" 1080p: Projection KDS-55A2020 55" 1080p: Projection KDS-60A2020 60" 1080p: Projection 20S3000 20" 1366x768 1 26S3000 26" 1366x768 2 32S3000 32" 1366x768 2 40S3000 40" 1366x768 2 ...
480i is the video mode used for standard-definition digital video [1] in the Caribbean, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Philippines, Myanmar, Western Sahara, and most of the Americas (with the exception of Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay).
Sony KV-1320UB Trinitron from 1969. Sony produced the TV8-301, the world's first all-transistor television, in 1959. [98] In 1968, the company introduced the Trinitron brand name for its lines of aperture grille cathode-ray tube televisions and afterwards computer monitors. Sony stopped production of Trinitron for most markets, but continued ...
This method (known as 'gated NTSC') was adopted by Sony on their 1970s Trinitron sets (KV-1300UB to KV-1330UB), and came in two versions: "PAL-H" and "PAL-K" (averaging over multiple lines). [ 6 ] [ 14 ] It effectively treated PAL as NTSC, suffering from hue errors and other problems inherent in NTSC and required the addition of a manual hue ...
For the majority of images it will consume 60–80% of the power of an LCD. OLED displays use 40% of the power of an LCD displaying an image that is primarily black as they lack the need for a backlight, [35] while OLED can use more than three times as much power to display a mostly white image compared to an LCD. [36] Environmental influences
A Zenith Model 5-S-220 "cube" radio c. 1937 Among Zenith's early famous products were the "Royal" series of transistor radios and the " Trans-Oceanic " series of shortwave portable radios, which were produced from 1942 to 1981.