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Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2008 |
Stealth Computer offers 24-inch wide-screen rugged LCD touchscreen display The SV-2400 24-inch industrial-grade, panel-mount liquid crystal display (LCD) is for harsh environments in industrial plant floor and Human Machine Interface applications. |
Home Theater January 2, 2003 |
LG Philips Bows 52" LCD TV LCD TVs are not only becoming trendy -- they are also getting huge. In late December, the LG.Philips LCD company announced what it believes to be the world's largest LCD TV, a widescreen 52" -diagonal HDTV display with image generated by more than two million pixels. |
PC Magazine July 24, 2003 Alfred Poor |
Big is Beautiful Samsung's new 21.3-inch LCD monitor brings wide-open spaces to your desktop. |
Home Theater June 7, 2005 |
Viewmongous LCD HDTV Sharp will begin to sell a jumbo 65V-inch 1 LCD flat-panel HDTV, touted as the world's largest LCD model. |
PC Magazine August 4, 2003 Alfred Poor |
A Competitively-Priced Display for the Home or Office The features on 19-inch Dell UltraSharp 1901FP LCD stack up nicely to the sub-$700 price. |
Home Theater April 3, 2002 |
Sharp's 30" Widescreen LCD TV Arrives The two hottest trends in video displays are DLP projection and LCD television. Sharp Electronics Corporation is on top of both of them. On April 3, Sharp announced the retail availability of its first 30" widescreen liquid crystal television... |
Home Theater July 24, 2001 |
Sharp Debuts LCD Monitors for HD/Multi-purpose Use Sharp has taken the LCD to the next level with several new products, the foremost being the LC-28HM2 ultra-thin monitor. Sleek, lightweight, and fit to incorporate a pair of side-mounted Bose loudspeakers, the LC-28HM2 is said to be capable of true HDTV resolution... |
Home Toys February 2003 Richard Railey |
Projection: Which is the best choice for your needs? When it comes to Home Video Projection there seems to be a compromise between the amount one is willing to spend and the quality available at the right price. DLP, LCD or CRT projectors; what do these terms mean and does the latest buzz mean it is the best? |
PC World September 2002 Kalpana Narayanamurthi |
Buyers' Guide to Monitors Inexpensive CRT and LCD models are suitable for general use, but many full-featured models are worth the extra cost. |
PC World August 13, 2001 Douglas F. Gray & Tom Mainelli |
Compaq Unwraps $499 Flat-Panel Display PC maker joins trend, ships LCD at mainstream price... |
PC World November 2003 Kirk Steers |
Is There an LCD Flat Screen in Your Future? Everything you need to know about flat-panel displays, including how they match up against CRTs and what other hardware your PC must have to run an LCD successfully. |
Home Toys February 2005 |
The Right Screen for the Right Scene Homeowners can take solace in the fact that there is a LCD TV available to meet their specific needs and the performance demands of a variety of digital content. Kitchen... Home office/den... Bedroom... etc. |
Home Theater April 1, 2008 Mark Fleischmann |
Dolby and SIM2 Dazzle with LEDs A glimpse of how good black and dark colors could look on a flat-panel LCD TV. |
Macworld July 2000 Frith Breitzer |
Flat Panels: The Next Generation Macworld Lab Evaluates 6 New Displays to See Whether Digital Makes a Difference |
IEEE Spectrum November 2012 Benjamin Gross |
How RCA Lost the LCD RCA owned the early patents but failed to commercialize the liquid crystal display |
Home Theater August 2005 Geoffrey Morrison |
LG Electronics 42LP1D LCD HDTV and 42PX4D Plasma HDTV You may have to pay a little more for it, but the 42PX4D offers strong performance for the money. The 42LP1D LCD HDTV is very bright, has a great contrast ratio, and is fairly inexpensive. |
The Motley Fool July 21, 2004 Mark Mahorney |
Corning Comes Through LCD glass demand drives revenue up for the company. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2006 John S. McClenahen |
Air Products Plans New Korean Plant Allentown, Pa.-based Air Products & Chemicals Inc. is constructing a new nitrogen trifluoride plant in Ulsan, South Korea, to support Asian semiconductor and liquid crystal display markets. |
Technology Research News September 10, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Display brighter than film Computer screens can't hold a candle to film where dynamic range is concerned, but that could change. A display with 10 times the brightness range of film and 300 times that of the average LCD promises to dramatically liven up medical images, video games and eventually even television. |
The Motley Fool January 18, 2012 Keki Fatakia |
Can Crystal LED Be A Game-Changer For Sony? Despite new technology, Sony's new set faces a huge challenge in the beleaguered TV market. |
PC World May 2006 Kirk Steers |
Improve Your Image: 13 Simple Graphics Tweaks Some small adjustments to your LCD monitor can make a big difference in picture quality. |
Home Theater August 2006 Geoffrey Morrison |
Sharp AQUOS LC-57D90U LCD HDTV Per screen inch, this is the most expensive TV reviewed in years. But does it offer enough better performance to justify its substantial premium? |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2009 |
Rugged Laptop/Tablet Mil-Spec Hybrid for Military Computing Introduced by Stealth Computer Rugged laptop computer supplier Stealth Computer is introducing a rugged laptop/rugged tablet mil-spec hybrid for military computing in demanding environments in indoor and outdoor/field applications. |
Home Theater March 26, 2002 |
Next Wave: Hi-Def LCD Screens Liquid crystal displays have been around a long time, but only in the past year or so have they gotten the engineering attention they deserve -- as potentially movie-quality displays... |
Defense Update Issue 3, 2005 |
How OLED Works? OLED devices use less power and can be capable of high, higher brightness and fuller color than liquid crystal microdisplays. |
PC World October 23, 2001 Tracey Capen |
Luxury Never Comes Cheap NEC's LCD 1850X delivers a crystal-clear picture, a wide viewing angle, and pivoting, but it'll cost you... |
PC Magazine May 4, 2004 Alfred Poor |
What's New With Displays Our guide explains state-of-the-art display technology and looks ahead. |
Home Theater December 2006 Gary Merson |
Philips 42PF9831D LCD HDTV Philips' 42PF9831D is the first and only LCD reviewed that doesn't exhibit one of LCD's biggest problems: motion lag. |
The Motley Fool June 7, 2005 Rich Smith |
Sharp's Enormous LCD TV The Japanese electronics giant builds a 5-foot-5 television. Sharp's new set is little more than an exercise in hubris. |
PC Magazine February 14, 2007 Robert Heron |
Buying Guide: Flat Panel HDTVs The only thing worse than being unable to attend a favorite sporting event in person is knowing that the event is being broadcast in high definition and that your current TV won't do it justice. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2008 Monica Heger |
Microsoft Engineers Invent Energy-Efficient LCD Competitor Telescopic pixel display lets more light out than an LCD |
PC World February 2006 Laura Blackwell |
Tweaking Text on LCDs How to increase the size of on-screen text without reducing its sharpness. |
PC Magazine August 3, 2004 |
Resolution Limitation Some notebook computers have displays with resolutions as high as 1,600 by 1,200 pixels on a 15-inch panel, yet 17-inch LCD monitors are limited to 1,280-by-1,024. Why can't manufacturers make desktop monitors with higher resolutions? |
T.H.E. Journal May 2005 |
SHD-3010 LCD TV The compact, lightweight LCD TV is only 4" deep and can be easily transported around campus or wall-mounted without taking up too much classroom space. |
T.H.E. Journal January 2005 |
Sharp LCD Video/Data Monitors Expanding its line of professional large-format LCD video/data monitors, which includes the LC-M3700 and the LC-M3700P, Sharp has introduced the company's largest LCD monitor with the LC-M4500. |
The Motley Fool August 24, 2006 Rich Smith |
Samsung Says "Sayonara, Sharp" The Japanese electronics giant builds a 70-inch LCD TV. Investors, where is the sense in this move? |
Reactive Reports Issue 33 David Bradley |
Two-faced Liquid Crystals A new class of programmable liquid crystals could be used to make variable optical filters for laboratory instrumentation and digital cameras; they might even be used to treat dyslexia. |