3D fernseher
Led-tv
Samsung 3D
Mitsubishi became the first manufacturer ever to make a commercial Laser TV available to consumers in stores in November 2008. Aptly named Laservue, this TV was priced at around $7,000. A little pricey for today’s market. The Laservue is available in 65 inch or 73 inch versions and is also 3D ready and as you would expect these days it is perfect for wall mounting.
Rumors of Toshiba entering the market are spreading rapidly. Whether many other manufacturers wish to enter the race remains to be seen.
LASER TV vs. OLED – How They Stack Up?
To be honest, as the two technologies stand at the moment, Laser TV is suited to one end of the TV market and OLED the other. Laser TV technology currently suits the large display market and at present OLED technology suits the smaller display market, of course this will change as both develop over time. The two technologies are not yet going head to head in the TV market.
Take a look at the features of each:
LASER TV:
– Wider range of colors displayed (roughly doubling standard HDTV’s)
– The intensity of the laser is maintained for the lifespan of the TV, meaning a high
 quality image is maintained throughout the life of the TV, unlike current HDTV
 technology
- Laser TVs utilize roughly a quarter of power used by current TV technology
- Laser TVs tend to be half the weight of current HDTV’s
- First TV commercially available in 65 and 73 inch versions
OLED TV:
- Excellent image quality at 1000000:1 contrast ratio
– Better image quality means wider viewing angle of 180 degrees
– Ultra thin screens measuring 3mm thin
– Power consumption is less that current technology since no backlight is required
- First TV commercially available in 11inchs