Saturday, October 9, 2010

We tried the Toshiba GL1 glasses Televisions.

Of course, you have to resort to into value that Toshiba has not any to evade by announcing the GL1. It has a falsely small trade share and won't suffer too much (if at all) from any 3D TV sales descent while tribe wait for the next-generation technology. Toshiba's Regza filament of 3D TV looks stunning, but have been priced to *not* sell. We're not even mentioning the giant battle that comes with the otherwise monotonous TV if you get the variation with a Cell processor.



It is plausible to regard that Toshiba could be trying to stall the sales of their competitors with this bulletin (just before the Holiday season). And that could very well be unelaborated because the paradigm with TVs is that once you go for one, you confine it for a very long time. Right now, Samsung, LG and Sony are the paramount beneficiaries from the towering TV upgrade cycle. Toshiba wants to press inescapable that customers wait until the concern has a great product on the shelves.






What's needed to at the end of the day make it work? Toshiba's technology is based on an array of meagre lenses that delineate 9 images in exceptional directions -- for every pixel. Because of this complex apparatus, Toshiba's GL1 cannot suit the highest doggedness convenient on standard TVs. On the 12" and 20" TV, the sculpture looks OK, but on the 56" prototype, the diminish real resolution is noticeable.



The compelling news is that this will presumably be solved by continued miniaturization on root components and manufacturing improvements. The more obscure challenge comes from the episode that the lenticular technology used in the GL1 spurious that the viewer is positioned just in front of the TV. Someone walking by from the standpoint would have a harder time conjunctio in view of a decent image. This seems as though a fundamental issue, but hey, once upon a time, LCD displays had crappy vision angles too, so let's give it a chance.

toshiba



Conclusion Regardless of the motives, Toshiba has sent a discernible conspicuous and from what we can tell, the open is on their side. People want glasses-less 3D TV, so whoever can redeem will get the benefits. TV manufacturers have infatuated notice, so we lay that CES plans are being chanced virtuousness now. The GL1 TVs should be accessible for mark-down (somewhere) in December.




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