With LCD losing popularity day-by-day and some even calling the product a rip-off, now the LCD TV Association plans to launch a GreenTV Program. The LCD TV Association is a trade organisation that exists to help the entire LCD supply chain, and recently started their newest green campaign to reduce power consumption and raise consumer awareness. With the OLED market slowly growing, and the LCD market losing popularity in several news items, the association wants to give the TV a green look and feel.
"We believe LCD TVs already consume the least energy to build, use and dispose of, but we want to make them even better in the future and have a lighter 'carbon footprint' on the Earth by having the most recyclable parts and highest possible energy efficiencies," says Bruce Berkoff, Chairman of the LCD TV Association to WideScreenReview.com. The association thinks several things should change to create a more green LCD TV. Berkoff believes that manufacturers should use ambient light sensors, smarter electronics and less heavy materials if they want things to change.
Berkoff thinks that manufacturers should act now, since "homes add LCD TVs to more rooms" and the average size of screens is still growing.
Next: Popcorn Hour's A-100 available in online store
Previous: UK set to ban excessively loud ads


Last I heard, they're more popular than plasma. CRT? Who the hell still uses CRT? I love my 20" Samsung LCD. Great image quality, no glare and my eyes like it more. I think someone is smoking crack. LCD rules... until laser TV comes out or OLED comes down in price.


nobody.....used car dealer maybe











I saw a cheap $800 Samsung that was unwatchable around super bowl time in the store in 2008, it had AWFUL viewing angles and its "black" was yucky grey. Then I've seen pretty decent LCDs with good viewing angles, but they weren't 100% perfect either, they had only a slight viewing angle issue.
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&lr=&q=lcd+screen+quality+crt&as_qdr=m&btnG=Search
Also keep in mind TVs are calibrated to be super bright in the showroom both to overcome the birght light and because the brightest picture grabs consumers' attention and that's the one they'll likely buy.
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&lr=&q=hdtv+calibration&as_qdr=m&btnG=Search
It's true of all display technologies AFAIK. I think consumers like it that way as well. I've never heard a non technical person ask me to calibrate their TV, or even ask what that means. I KNOW a lot of consumers never calibrate their TVs properly.
Then there's LED backlight LCDs Vs. cold cathode fluorescent backlit LCDs.
I've been told that many manufacturers outsource the making of the display and may even switch suppliers during a production run. I don't know first hand if that's true.
I've seen many CRT monitors with junk circuitry in them, and that caused more problems (blur, bad black levels, washed out picture) than the actual tube itself. Also, CRTs loose their brightness over time. Normally, you shouldn't compare your new LCD to a 15 year old CRT that's run 12 hours per day everyday. One exception is the Samsung SyncMaster 930B LCD (NOT MINE!). Horrible rubish. Bad vieing angle, motion blur, "kinda black" blacks, and light leakage. My 1995 cheap Acer picture tube monitor IS better than this.
My laptop LCD actually has color issues around the edges of moving objects but when they hold still it's fine. I'll tolerate it a little on portables, not on my main monitor.
It's really not that simple to compare X is always better than Y.
I've seen plasma has better viewing angles than the best LCDs in the store next to it, but LCD has a sharper picture and plasma flickers.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=plasma+flickers&btnG=Google+Search
No display technology is perfect yet. When I choose replace my imperfect tube with something else that something else WILL NOT be another imperfect display. I'll look at LASER TV when it comes out to see if the hype is really worth it, but I don't think I'll buy one. ALL MODERN TELEVSIONS HAVE DRM!!!!!
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=hdcp&btnG=Search
HDCP and the DMCA give Hollywood control over what hardware manufacturers can sell and what features they can include.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=dmca&btnG=Search
Remember VCRs? We'll have no new cool gadgets like that without Hollywood's permission, and they didn't give permission for the VCR in the first place, so we'll have no cool gadgets like that in the future.






"LCD is crap, plain and simple."
That was a very stupid statement. Is that why pretty much every business in the world has switched from CRT to LCD, because it's crap technology? Go sit in the corner and think about what you said.
@ pinkish
You must have also liked War and Peace. Both were a long read.
This message was edited at: 08-05-2008 15:55


"Yes, CRT still has far superior picture. Is it fat and heavy? Yes, but does it matter? Are you moving it around everyday?"
Again I ask, are they available in 54"? and where can I buy the nuclear reactor to power one?
Blank;
"Also keep in mind TVs are calibrated to be super bright in the showroom both to overcome the birght light and because the brightest picture grabs consumers' attention and that's the one they'll likely buy.
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&lr=&q=hdtv+calibration&as_qdr=m&btnG=Search
It's true of all display technologies AFAIK. I think consumers like it that way as well. I've never heard a non technical person ask me to calibrate their TV, or even ask what that means. I KNOW a lot of consumers never calibrate their TVs properly."
Tell them to read the manual... Most I've seen have a simple button push on the remote to change the lamp from low to medium to high thus changing the brightness of the display, mind you on the brightest setting it does state that the bulb life will be shorter but they're relativly cheap.


If you had any idea about how the system works, you will have known LCD's were pushed into every electronics store with ramped up pricing so that the store made more profit, for one, and the other incentive was it was far easier to stock the TV's since they took up less space. It NEVER had anything to do with better quality. People are continuously brainwashed into accepting lower quality so that these manufacturers can put out a cheap ugly products and still have people buy them.
LCD's were created for COMPUTER use, that's where they shine for almost all reasons. As for TV, it was NEVER intended.


