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Posts Tagged ‘ Samsung OLED TV ’
Today I have an interview with Erich Strasser from OLED Web-Company. His company owns and operates the leading OLED technology websites. He just got back from CES 2010 and I thought I’d ask him about his trip.
Admin: Can you please introduce yourself and tell us about your websites?
Erich: Our websites http://www.oled.at (german) and http://www.oled-display.net are the leading OLED information websites. Our goal is to inform our visitors about the newest products, findings, forecasts about and with OLED Display technology.
Admin: How long have you been involved in OLED TV technology?
Erich: We started www.oled.at and www.oled-display.net about 7 years ago.
Admin: Do you think OLED TV will eventually take over from plasma and LCD technology?
Erich: Yes I am sure about this. OLED is the future in the HDTV technology. OLED TV promises Superior picture Quality, High Efficiency, very thin and in future also cost effective. The first OLED TV XEL-1 and the LG 15 inch hitting the market today are very expensive, but those prices will fall dramatically as the technology matures and volume ramps up. OLEDs will prove more cost effective because they require fewer materials and fewer processing steps than LCD and Plasma Tvs.
Admin: What are your thoughts on the emergence of LED backlit TV? Can OLED compete against it anytime soon?
Erich: Not soon because the companies must build more OLED fabrication labs.
Admin: Can you please tell us what impressed you most at CES 2010?
Erich: Sonys 24.5 inch 3D OLED, and the 14 inch transparent AMOLED Notebook from Samsung mobile Display.
Admin: Who, in your opinion, will first produce a consumer ready OLED TV with a decent screen size?
Erich: Sony is in some financial troubles, LG Display introduced the 15 inch AMOLED TV and have big plans. Samsung wants to bring out larger Displays only if they compete with LCD and Plasma at the price segment. So my opinion is LG Display will be the first with larger sizes.
Thanks to Erich for this interview on the latest OLED TV news. You can see more at his site, just click on this link: OLED Television
Continue Reading »At CES 2010 in Vegas, one of the top items must be the new Samsung 3D OLED TV. This 14″ wonder is not yet available to consumers, perhaps not until 2013. Hopefully by then screen sizes will increase and the prices will come down a bit. Check it out..
Thanks to my friend Erik for posting these CES videos. His site is http://www.oled-display.net/
Continue Reading »This next year will be pivotal for OLED TV. WIth CES 2010 due to start in a few days, all eyes are on Las Vegas to see what the TV manufacturers will have on display.
More important though is will they have anything available to consumers? It’s been 2 years since the Sony XEL-1 was released to the public. It’s understood that Sony may be losing money on each XEL-1 OLED TV as the price is far too high to interest the general public and production costs are steep as well.
What we may see at CES are the following:
Sony OLED TV
Samsung OLED TV
LG OLED TV
Speaking of LG OLED technology, here’s some news from Kodak:
ROCHESTER, N.Y., Dec. 30 — Eastman Kodak Company (NYSE:EK) announced today that it has completed the previously announced sale of its OLED (organic light-emitting diode) business to an entity set up by a group of LG companies.
This move will tighten Kodak’s investment focus and strengthen its financial position. Financial details were not disclosed.
“As we said earlier this year, OLED is one of the businesses we wanted to reposition to maximize Kodak’s competitive advantage at the intersection of materials and imaging science,” said Laura G. Quatela, Kodak’s Chief Intellectual Property Officer and manager of the company’s OLED business. “This action is consistent with that strategy. Our OLED intellectual property portfolio is fundamental; however, realizing the full value of this business would have required significant investment.”
Be sure to visit in the coming weeks for OLED TV reviews from CES 2010
Continue Reading »Sony engineers are facing technological hurdles in producing larger sized OLED TVs. This is according to Sony Corp. Executive Deputy President Hiroshi Yoshioka.
At a press conference on Nov 19, Yoshioka stated that their TV division is facing challenges. Sony currently buys LCD panels from Samsung and despite releasing the first OLED TV 2 years ago, has yet to come out with a reasonable sized OLED model that would be attractive to consumers.
“The business is tough without our own displays,” Yoshioka said in an interview at Sony’s headquarters.
“For the short term, Sony has been bullish about 3-D TVs, one area where rivals are also just getting started, and Sony is promising products next year.
With 3-D TVs, images appear to have depth and give an illusion of almost jutting out from the screen, although they require special glasses.”
Lots of talk about OLED TV lately but when will we see someting bigger than 15″ in stores?
Full story at: ajc.com
Continue Reading »OLED TV was not exactly taking center stage at the OLEDs World Summit 2009 in San Francisco.
The 11th annual event started yesterday and winds up today.
Most of the focus is on smaller OLED displays and OLED lighting however. FOr a look at the agenda, click here.
Cnet’s Erica Ogg was there and provided the following:
“Though LG’s eye-popping OLED (organic light-emitting diode) display wowed audiences in Berlin last month, it’s best not to get too excited. There’s not going to be more where that came from, at least for a while.
The industry is still at least three years away from churning out standard-size televisions of 32 inches or larger at something approaching acceptable prices. And though Sony grabbed all the attention in early 2008 with its $2,500 11-inch OLED, it’s faded into the background when it comes to nudging the technology forward. Initially promising to follow up with 21-inch and 27-inch models, Sony’s deferred those plans while battling bigger problems with its TV business.
With Sony on the sidelines, it seemed like we were witnessing yet another false start for a technology that’s been intent on challenging existing TV standards like LCD and plasma for almost half a decade now.
Beset by the standard issues that come with bringing a new technology into the mainstream, like the exorbitantly high cost of development, OLED TVs might be on the verge of shifting out of neutral as new standard bearers for the technology emerge. The ones to watch now are Samsung and LG Electronics, which have each signaled that they’re ready to make larger investments in OLED technology for TVs.”
Read the full article here: OLEDs World Summit
Continue Reading »