Samsung Bets on a Thin Future

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SAN JOSE, California — Samsung is one of several manufacturers betting that consumers want their gadgets to look like the models in fashion magazines: Skinny, glossy and colorful.

“Every few years there’s a new buzzword,” says Scott Birnbaum, vice president of Samsung’s LCD business. “First, everything was neat, then everything was cool, now everything is thin.”

Slim profiles are already a big factor in mobile phones, digital cameras and MP3 players, where small size has a definite practical advantage. This year, Samsung, LG, Lenovo and other manufacturers are bringing the trend to larger appliances, like TVs and computers.

Samsung says it is working on reducing the profile of every component it produces–from processors to displays and memory–while upping the ante on performance.

Samsung’s latest TVs are a third of an inch thick. The company is working to shrink them further by building the drivers for the TVs directly into the glass cells rather than putting them on the bezel that surrounds, the display, says Birnbaum.

“We think TVs are going to become a liquid crystal piece of art that hangs on the walls of your house,” he says.

The company showed off some of the technologies behind its new thin products at a press event here on Wednesday.

“Samsung plays in so many different areas of the electronics business from hard drives to flash and memory,” says Rhoda Alexander, an analyst for iSuppli, a market research firm. “So when they try to make everything thin they can layer it all better than anyone else.”

Take Samsung’s latest LED-backlit TVs, which Samsung promises will get up to 40 percent skinnier in the next two years.

“We can do this because we are reducing the number of LED bars that go on the sides of the TV bezel,” says Birnbaum. “Last year we were using six LED bars on four sides; this year its four bars on two sides. In two years, it will be just two bars across two sides.”

Slimming Everything Down

To make gadgets truly thin, every component, from processors to memory to the display, needs to be slim yet powerful.

In processors, chip giant Intel has held the edge, creating faster chips that pack more computing power into a smaller package. By concentrating on low power yet highly efficient chips, Samsung hopes to get an edge on Intel.

“Intel has been doing high-k metal gate 32 nanometer chips for high performance computers,” says Anna Hunter, vice president of foundry services for Samsung. “But we are the first company to offer it in low power systems for consumers.”

High-k metal gate refers to use of an element called hafnium, instead of the traditional silicon dioxide, for the gate layer in a transistor. The technique helps chips stay small while improving performance.

Samsung has also said it is launching a new 2.5-inch hard disk drive Wednesday that can store 640 gigabytes of data. The drives operate at 7,200 rotations per minute.

But that drive doesn’t necessarily put Samsung ahead, says George Walsh, managing director of TechWatch, a newsletter from research firm Jon Peddie Research.

It’s the fastest hard disk drive from Samsung — but rivals have done better, he says. “I have a 10,000 rpm disk drive that I used when I put together my computer nearly a year ago,” says Walsh. “Samsung is also avoiding some of the latest technology trends in storage especially around solid state drives.”

Where Samsung truly has the competitive edge is in displays and TVs, says Riddhi Patel, an analyst for iSuppli.

“No one else has LED-backlit LCD TVs that are as thin as Samsung,” she says.

It’s a big advantage. By 2013, nearly 90 percent of the TVs sold in the U.S., will be LCDs, estimates research firm DisplaySearch.

Photo: Samsung OLED TV (fatcontroller/Flickr)


Sharp squeezes DivX HD playback into new Quattron HDTVs

Apparently there was still a HDTV or two without the DivX stamp, but that should be mostly resolved now after a new deal with Sharp. The new AQUOS LE820 LCDs — featuring the apparently astonishing Quattron quad-pixel technology — are able to play 1080p DivX HD files from a connected USB drive. Not quite the embedded content service we saw at CES, but as previous announcements have revealed, DivX has been very effective at squeezing a toe in the door and eventually widening it to include more devices and compatibility. The best part? We don’t have to re-rip all those DVDs prepared for the upcoming Galaxy S smartphone.

Sharp squeezes DivX HD playback into new Quattron HDTVs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Apr 2010 20:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PS3 meets Hori LCD dock, good things happen

Hori is a company that’s no stranger to strapping LCDs to consoles and calling them portable, but for some reason we’re quite smitten with its latest monitor docking station. The HP3-87 doesn’t stray too far from the formula — it adds an 11.6-inch screen to a wraparound structure for your PS3, with stereo speakers, two headphone jacks, and composite or component input options. With a resolution of 1,366 x 768, it’s well suited to handling the 16:9 signal coming out of the do-everything console, although its 500:1 contrast ratio, 7ms response time, and 200 nits of brightness are perhaps a tiny step behind the times. On the other hand, it’s compatible with the Japan-only Torne DTV adapter and it’s officially licensed by Sony itself, so it can’t be too bad, right? All you Tokyo-ites will have until May 27 to decide, when the HP3-87 goes on sale for ¥26,040 ($276). International release plans are not yet disclosed, but if you really need the portability, you could always grab a PS3 laptop from your local online auction house. Which option will be more useful (less useless?) we leave up to you to decide.

PS3 meets Hori LCD dock, good things happen originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Apr 2010 07:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nintendo 3DS to feature 3.4-inch Sharp parallax barrier display?

There aren’t many mass production options on the market when it comes to glasses-less 3D displays for Nintendo’s forthcoming 3DS handheld gaming console. And according to early leaks from Japan, the special Nintendo 3DS display is supposedly built by Hitachi and Sharp using a parallax barrier system. So guess where this new 3.4-inch, 480 x 854 pixel display is likely headed? While Sharp doesn’t say for sure, it’s a good bet that this parallax barrier 3D LCD will be fronting the user interface on the 3DS. Unlike the 3D displays you’ll find in modern 3D HDTVs requiring the viewer to wear active or passive glasses, Sharp’s display uses a parallax barrier system to create a sense of depth by using a series of vertical slits in an ordinary LCD to direct light to the right and left eyes. The panel offers a 500nit brightness, 1,000:1 contrast, and is available with or without a touchscreen. A non-touchscreen version of the display goes into mass production before June but there’s no specific mention of the touchscreen timeline (but we imagine it won’t be far behind). In other words, we could have a Nintendo 3DS on the market before the holidays. Just saying. Guess we’ll find out for sure at E3 in June.

Update: Akihabara News went eyes-on with the display and came away impressed with the colors and brightness. Better yet, it says, “Sharp succeed to do what Sony and Panasonic does with 3D Glasses!” Well, that sounds hopeful.

Nintendo 3DS to feature 3.4-inch Sharp parallax barrier display? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Apr 2010 01:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bang & Olufsen announces 46-inch BeoVision 10

Suddenly Bang & Olufsen’s 40-inch HDTV seems like a consolation prize. While the BeoVision 10-40 is making its good will tour of the states, the kids in Copenhagen will be checking out the new standard in the company’s lavish displays, the BeoVision 10-46. Aside from the 6-inch real estate boost, this thing sports “a new and exciting LED-based, 240Hz LCD panel” and unnamed “sophisticated motion compensation technologies” that apparently sport “a yet unseen level of smoothness.” Can you handle all this sophistication? We didn’t think so. To be unveiled on April 14 in Denmark, goes on sale this summer. No word yet on a price, but we’re guessing you can’t afford it anyways.

Update: Special thanks to Jesper for sending the price our way: 54,990 DKK (or about $9,940). We were right — you can’t afford it.

Bang & Olufsen announces 46-inch BeoVision 10 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Mar 2010 11:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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An Ultra-thin TV Demands and Ultra-thin Speaker

DefTech_XTR50.jpg

A speaker that sticks out 4 to 5 inches from the wall was fine in the old days of plasma TVs that did the same, say the people at Definitive Technology. But in early 2010, we’re all flocking to ultra-thin LED-backlit LCD flat panels, and those hug the wall with a depth of 1.75 inches or less. Who wants some bulky 4- or 5-inch speaker next to that? Instead, look to the Mythos XTR-50. It measures 27 inches high, 6 inches wide, and 1.5 inches thick. It ships with a wall-mounting bracket for horizontal or vertical orientation, as well as stands for tabletop or shelf use.

One secret of the thin profile is an aluminum dome that replaces a cone-shaped diaphragm. The Mythos XTR-50 is available on Amazon.com and Crutchfield.com now, and in a few weeks you’ll be able to find it at Magnolia Home Theater (Best Buy’s high-end store within a store), Sixth Avenue Electronics, Abt Electronics, OneCall, Ultimate Electronics, and Vann’s for a list price of $699.

Bang & Olufsen announces BeoVision 10 North American Tour

You’re probably a little too old to rock out like you used to, and besides your hearing isn’t exactly what it was when you first saw Purple Fudge open for Hendrix at Cafe Wha? in the village. That’s okay — we found something for you and the missus now that the kids don’t come around as much as they used to. Bang & Olufsen have announced that its BeoVision 10 — the 40-inch behemoth currently available overseas — will be making its way to showrooms stateside this spring. To commemorate, the company is taking the the thing on tour, with dates including Chicago on March 18, New York on March 25, and LA on April 8. To keep up with your forever escalating tastes, guests who attend the events can check out a special edition Aston Martin DBS Carbon Black (with Bang & Olufsen BeoSound DBS audio system) and enter to win a bottle of Dom Perignon Vintage 2000 champagne. You’ve certainly come a long way from sipping Narragansett draft at Lupo’s Heartbreak Hotel, huh? Prices start at $6,248 and climb skyward rather quickly. PR after the break.

Continue reading Bang & Olufsen announces BeoVision 10 North American Tour

Bang & Olufsen announces BeoVision 10 North American Tour originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Mar 2010 04:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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George Takei can’t show you Sharp’s fourth pixel, can still blow your mind

We’ve seen our fair share of thin HDTVs — and pressed iPhones against them for comparison — so it’s no big deal when Sharp swivels its latest edge lit LED creation and shows off its 1.6-inch depth, but George Takei’s “Oh My” reaction is priceless. We were in the house for Sharp’s unveiling of its quad-pixel technology (now called Quattron) and weren’t sure we got the difference, so there’s no doubt they needed an extra something to show viewers why they should care (embedded after the break in case you didn’t spot it during the NCAA Tournament) since your display just isn’t ready for constant loops of sunflowers, saxophones and repeat playback of Oh Yeah via the USB media port.

Continue reading George Takei can’t show you Sharp’s fourth pixel, can still blow your mind

George Takei can’t show you Sharp’s fourth pixel, can still blow your mind originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Mar 2010 17:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba brings new LCDs this month with WiFi and LED, but no Cell

They may not be quite as thrilling as the Cell TV ZX900 series Toshiba was focused on during its CES press conference, but if you can put off all that LED-backlit, Wireless HD 3D conversion madness there’s a slew of other new HDTVs due this month. The 120Hz UX600 takes top billing with its edge-lit LEDs and sub 2-inch depth, plus the added bonus of an included WiFi adapter for access to all the NET TV features with VUDU and DLNA support, allowing access to Twitter, Pandora and more. The 40-, 46- and 55-inch editions retail at $1,399, $1,699 and $2,499, respectively. The 120Hz G300 series is available in the same sizes but without the LEDs, WiFi, Net TV and slim “Air Lagoon” styling the price maxes out at $1,599 for the largest screen. Moving down the line the E200 models focus on energy efficiency while the C100 and CV100 bring small 720p screens with or without built-in DVD player. A quick check of Amazon and other retailers shows the smaller ones already leaking into availability with their larger brethren due, oh, any day now. Check for full MSRP lists and press releases after the break,, plus a peek at the 55300U, if you must.

Continue reading Toshiba brings new LCDs this month with WiFi and LED, but no Cell

Toshiba brings new LCDs this month with WiFi and LED, but no Cell originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Mar 2010 14:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vizit cellular photo frame arrives March 23rd, your mom can’t afford one

Last we heard from Isabella Products, the company’s always-on Vizit photo frame was a 10.4-inch touchscreen LCD with a built-in cell modem to receive emailed pics and MMS, a built-in price of $280 (plus subscription fees), and an “early 2010” release date. Well, early 2010 is here, and so is the Vizit — sales commence on March 23rd. In honor of the occasion, the company has even spilled a few final details; according to Bostinnovation, Vizit’s service plan will use AT&T’s 3G network, share photos from both Flickr and Photobucket, and cost $6 per month or $72 for a full year. Sorry, Grandma, but at that price, you’ll have to make do with WiFi.

Vizit cellular photo frame arrives March 23rd, your mom can’t afford one originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 21 Mar 2010 19:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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