A 4SquareMedia Website
SmartHouse | SmartOffice | DigitalHome     
 
 
     THE LIFESTYLE TECHNOLOGY GUIDE    
 
sections
Product Reviews
Services
Subscribe
 
 
TVS & LARGE DISPLAY / PLASMA

  After CES Panasonic Still Has The Best Bang For Your Buck Plasma TV

By David Richards | Monday | 16/01/2012

While LG and Samsung were slugging it out with their new OLED TVs at CES, Panasonic was quietly releasing a brand new range of wafer thin LED TVs and a new range of plasma TVs, along with a cleverly designed home theatre range.

According to Matt Pierce, Marketing Manager AV at Panasonic Australia, the new Panasonic plasma TV still delivers the best TV picture quality in the world for the price, and I have to agree after seeing the new range on their stand.

According to Panasonic executives, the company is developing its own OLED television to rival the ones shown by LG and Samsung, with the TV giant admitting it did not have one ready to show off just yet.

Panasonic President Fumio Ohtsubo insisted that an OLED screen would be going on sale at a similar time to the Korean manufacturers' offerings.

"Unfortunately we weren't able to show one at the show this time, but we are certainly developing it," he told reporters at a briefing in Las Vegas.

"I can't say exactly when, but if Samsung and LG put theirs out this year we will try and make sure we are not too late," he said.

One of the really impressive plasma TVs on offer from Panasonic is the VT50 series which come as the 55-inch P55VT50 and the 65-inch P65VT50. The new Panasonic plasma TVs come as a single piece of wafer thin glass which gives the VT50 a style and beauty that is as good as any other TV shown at CES.


Click to enlarge

Both models have Panasonic's "infinite black ultra-panel" technology which delivers some of the most impressive black levels ever seen on a plasma TV.

A specially-designed filter prevents external light getting in and distorting the image patterns.

The new TV comes with a "touch pad controller". This device is designed to make navigating around internet-based content a little bit easier. There are some hard buttons too, for accessing services like the new Telstra TV app and Skype.

The new Panasonic plasma technology has 24,576 steps of gradation, which means that images with subtle tonal changes between shades are clearly defined. The TV is also THX 3D certified, and is capable of converting 2D to 3D. 24p 3D is also smoothed, using Panasonic's new "3D 24p cinema smoother".

Page: [1] 2 | Next Page

 

Print this article
Email this story to a friend
Link this story:

Link this page to delicious Link this page to Digg Link this page to Furlit Link this page to News Vine Link this page to Reddit Link this page to Spurl Link this page to Yahoo My Web RSS this section

 

 


LATEST REVIEWS
MORE
Nokia's Windows Phone: Can Two Wrongs Make A Right?
With Nokia and Microsoft’s stronghold on the mobile market slipping, can the Lumia prove two...
Yamaha's Portable iPhone Dock Punches Well Above Its Weight
Yamaha's portable iPhone dock oozes street cred, but does it dish out worthy sound
Review: Why Warrior Deserves A Standing Ovation
Warrior mercilessly pulls no punches, but you'll want to watch it again and again



SMARTHOUSE-FEATURED RETAILER

 
©SMARTHOUSE 2012 | Legal | Disclaimer | Terms & Conditions | Web Marketing by: SEO Melbourne
Level 1, 275 Alfred Street, North Sydney NSW 2060