LCD Revenues To Take a Big Drop in 2009, Says Analyst Group

Displaysearch

An analyst group is predicting that the TV manufacturing industry will suffer its first overall revenue loss in years in 2009, leading to significant short trends in the industry.

Among the predictions by the consumer display researcher DisplaySearch are that well-known companies will suffocate smaller brands with lower prices, plasmas (or PDPs) will momentarily regain their old popularity, and that it will take the industry close to two years to regain its late-2007 momentum.

Like the other consumer technologies, TVs have not been immune to the economic recession. Even with the coming digital transition, consumer demand for TVs were down late in the year. The current estimate is that LCD revenues will fall 16 percent down to 64 billion, in a market where all TV sales will go down by 18%.

As we have noted before, the most obvious way in which companies deal with a downturn in the economy is by slashing the prices of their most popular products. Samsung and Sony notoriously chopped down their entry-level Blu-ray players over a month ago and they’ve since dominated the competition with over 75% of Blu-ray player sales.

If they continue this trend next year with TVs as expected, they’ll take a stronghold of that market as well, which isn’t really a good thing for consumers in the long term. In the last couple of years, so-called ‘low-tiered’ vendors like Vizio and Olevia have offered quality TVs at some of the best dollar-for-dollar TV values, keeping the big companies honest (and the prices stable) by leveling the field.

When the larger companies like Sony lower their prices (and they will), they will also decrease the market share of the smaller ones and put them at a disadvantage that could lead to cuts in their business. We want to see a viable Vizio pumping out sweet OLEDs four years from now, rather than seeing it sell off its scrap heap to Sony.

DisplaySearch notes that that the price quandary has also positively
affected the growth of Plasma displays by up to 24% (to 13.9 M sold in
2008), and they say it will go up in 2009 to 14.6 M. This makes
sense. Plasma displays are like power-armed pitchers in baseball — the
newest brands go for premium prices that moneybaggers will spend
whatever it takes to obtain, and old models are downgraded but are
still seen as excellent bargains by consumers, because, hey, how can
you not pick up a 60-inch plasma or a 95 MPH fastball for a dime?

Even though plasmas are energy hogs and take up too much space,
cheap big screens are hard to pass up. Mitsubishi offered relatively inexpensive huge-screen offerings for Black Friday that proved popular, and
others will follow.

Looking between the lines at the graph above, there’s also the
understanding that a large growth in new display technologies like
OLEDs will not occur fully until the economy gets up on its feet.





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3D Live Events Are Coming To a Theater Near You. Do You Care?

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In the next couple of months, the NBA All-Star Game and the BCS championship game will be broadcast live in 3D in movie theaters. They will be among the first of several live events to be seen in the format.

According to Cinedigm and Sensio Tech, two of the companies behind the venture, over 80 theaters have been recently outfitted with satellite and 3D High-Def digital systems.

But executing this live event on a large scale involves more than a simple video feed from the event. It takes a few different companies and a 3D coding process.

Sensio Tech is a maker of stereoscopic 3D tech and provides the main innovation behind the theater broadcasts. Sensio’s sensor decodes the video stream from an HD DCP-200 playback server and produces the main 3D feed. This ‘sensor decoding’ is a detailed change in the depth perception of a video, a similar trick that’s expected to be used by video games in the next couple of years.

Before the feed is analyzed, it must be transmitted from the event in high-quality form. This is done by connecting the main HD feed with the 3D filter as it is sent through a DVB-S2 broadband IP transmission. It’s a key step that provides the maximum possible throughput on the satellite.

Otherwise, theatergoers might be forced to see a slow feed on a tape delay while it is being analyzed for 3D, and one that would result in an epic fail for the burgeoning tech. The IP transmission is mixed by IDC (International Datacasting Corporation).

By themselves, the broadband transmission and the 3D sensor might allow the viewing of an event at a single screen. But something else will allow theater owners to push the event to more than one screen and make it a more cost-effective technology. Streaming software by Doremi Digital will enable owners to send the signal to multiple screens in a single location, giving them the option to add more screens in case an event becomes a true must-see.

Two companies, Cinedigm and CineMedia, have been behind the inclusion of live events in major movie theaters over the last year. Cinedigm has brought several live sporting events, while CineMedia is behind the very successful broadcasts of several New York Metropolitan Opera productions.

So optimizing regular sports event for 3D appears to be a good idea but we’re skeptical that a lot of people will be willing to buy into it at the start.

For example, live sports events such as the BCS title game are usually available for free, and at this point, their depth perception can’t be optimized at the same level of detail as a multimillion-dollar production like Beowulf. In that movie, every scene that pops out is built around the technology’s maximum impact and takes months to perfect. We don’t know how Sension’s 3D theater clip will play, but the spontaneity of live action is bound to present significant depth perception problems. 

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And any downgrade from the good 3D tech people are used to might prove to be a disappointment.

The NFL tried out a 3D feed at a couple of locations three weeks ago and the result was not perfect. Two satellite glitches blacked out the game at times, and a camera refocus caused some people to remove the necessary headgear. Still, people at that screening appeared to be enthused about the innovation.

The NBA All-Star Game is on Valentine’s Day 2009, and tickets will run for $20.

What do you say? Are you willing to give 3D sports events a chance, or will you save your money for upcoming 3D-only movies like  My Bloody Valentine?





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LG Sunlight-Powered LCDs Bring Sunshine To Notebook Users

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LG’s latest green displays could offer consumers the two things they want out of their notebooks–lower power consumption and higher battery life–while working outdoors.

The company announced a 14.1-inch LCD panel that can switch to being illuminated by
sunlight instead of the backlight unit when used outdoors.

The switching allows the display’s outdoor energy consumption to
fall to one fourth the level of indoors consumption boosting battery
life. Backlight units in conventional notebooks can account for about 75 percent of the total energy consumption used in LCD panels, says the company. 

The new displays will solve the problem that most users face around visibility and clarity of their notebook screen in bright sunlight. LG says its offers contrast ratio of at least 9:1 when used outdoors, compared to 2:1 or 3:1 for most displays used currently in notebook PCs.

The LCD panels will debut at the Consumer Electronics Show next month where LG is likely offer more details on price and availability.





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