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BLU-RAY/HD-DVD
Hybrid Player |
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LG
ELECTRONICS LAUNCHES INDUSTRY’S FIRST DUAL-FORMAT
HIGH-DEFINITION DISC PLAYER
Player with Blu-ray
Disc and HD DVD Playback Capabilities Introduced for
First Quarter 2007 Availability. Read
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Articles on LCD and Plasma TV
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Articles on HDTV
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by:
Dakota Caudilla
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It’s hard to
deny the fact that plasma TVs offer the best
quality picture ever since the tube is
introduced to mankind!! The crystal-clear
quality of Plasma TVs makes it popular with
consumers even when the price was really quite
ludicrous. But now, with the skyrocketing
demand for Plasma TVs, Plasma TVs has become
more affordable. Encouraged by the
receptiveness of consumers, TV manufacturers
relies on amazing technology to come up with
super-thin Plasma TV designs that can be
mounted right on the wall! This will
definitely satisfy the need of ANY couch
potato.
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by:
Jeremy Hier
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The plasma
television has many advantages and benefits
for you and your entertainment needs and
wants. The plasma tv gives you incredible
picture quality, it has a sleek design, and it
is HDTV compatible.
Plasmas provide
sharper images and more vibrant colors. You
can display both HDTV and DTV signals as well
as computer signals such as XGA, SVGA, and
VGA.
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by:
Joseph Foley
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The buying of
large-screen TVs has absolutely skyrocketed
lately. It seems that everyone wants one –
and with good reason. The large-screen TV has
come a long way from those faded-out behemoths
of old that took up half your living room and
never really produced a picture of decent
quality. Now, however, especially in
combination with HDTV, you can get not only a
nice, large picture, but a crisp, clean one
too.
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by:
Alan Rhinehart
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Have you ever
watched a movie on a regular TV set, and then
watched the same movie on an HDTV? If so, you
would have noticed a huge difference! On the
HDTV viewing, you see and notice things you've
never seen before, even if you've seen the
same movie several times! The colors are
brighter, backgrounds are clearer, and details
are better defined. HDTV is like looking out
an open window, whereas in comparison,
standard TV is almost like looking through a
glass soda bottle. Because of CRT (cathode ray
tube) technology, TV is often referred to as
"the tube". After watching HDTV,
watching standard TV is almost like trying to
view through one!
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by:
Brian Stevens
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Getting the
best deal on satellite TV service can be
confusing.
There are only
two satellite TV providers in the USA -- DISH
Network and DIRECTV -- but each one has
numerous independent dealers who offer a
variety of different deals on satellite TV
systems and service.
So how do you
know which satellite TV provider has the best
satellite TV deal? And how do you tell which
of their dealers can offer you a great deal
plus great service?
I’ve spent
the last three weeks researching the Internet
to find out which satellite TV provider has
the best service, and which dealers are the
most reputable and offer the best deals.
Here’s what I
found …
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| Toshiba to launch more HD-DVD Players
in early 2007. Read
More... |
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by:
Amy Metz
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I want a larger
screen and so do you. There is absolutely no
reason for this wanting except for the feeling
of power that a large screen gives you. I have
no idea why it is, but we all seem to want a
larger screen for our TVs these days. The
question is, how to get a good deal on an LCD
TV without paying a fortune. Let’s give you
our top 3 tips on buying an LCD TV.
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by:
Andrew A
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With all of the
technology that is available for people to be
able to make their family or living rooms into
their own personal home theaters, many people
are deciding that a television, no matter how
large it is, is simply not enough to complete
their home theater experience. A new line of
comparatively small and inexpensive digital
home theater projectors is now available for
anyone looking for the ultimate home theater
experience. People who want to truly
experience the atmosphere of the theater can
now do so by creating their own miniature
screening room complete with a home theater
projector.
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by:
Bob Wood
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Remember the
Osborn? Or was it the Osborne? Actually, I
knew it existed, but didn’t care. This thing
was a personal computer. Like we’d ever need
one of those? Those new electric typewriters
with memory were the rage. THAT was something!
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by:
Bob Wood
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Secret #1: WHAT
YOU BUY TODAY WILL BE OBSOLETE TOMORROW, IF IT
ISN'T ALREADY.
What you should
do about it:
Don't sweat it.
Just read what you can before you buy to
educate yourself so you don't make a terrible
mistake. If you shop wisely, you can get a
tremendous leap over what you have come to
know as television. The good news is the
better stuff coming down the pipe is knocking
prices down on the stuff out now.
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by:
Tyler D Falls
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Online
Technology Source
Computers:
First Computer
Invented:
Most people
when they think of first computer invented
they think Bill Gates. This, however, is not
true, for the computer was invented long
before Bill Gates was around. Bill Gates only
revolutionized the computer, buy creating a
more compact and useful form of the computer
and making it available to everyone with a
job.
There are many
people out there who would say that the first
"computer" was the abacus, invented
in Asia about 5000 years ago. I however,
wouldn't.
The first of
the "modern" computers was invented
during World War II, in 1941 by a German
engineer named Konrad Zuse. Its name was the
Z3 and it was used to help design German
airplanes and missile's. Then in 1943, the
Allied forces developed a computer called
Colossus. It helped decode German messages.
The Mark I,
designed by Howard H. Aiken, an engineer
working with Harvard and IBM. The Mark I was
positively huge, taking up half of a football
field. It was useful though and it helped to
create ballistic charts for the US Navy during
the war.
Shortly after
this, came the Electronic Numerical Integrator
and Computer (ENIAC), developed by John
Presper Eckert and John W. Mauchly, working
with the government and the University of
Pennsylvania. ENIAC was about 1000 times
faster than The Mark I but no smarter.
The Use of
transistors, ment computers that could store
memory and even run programs. Soon after
computer languages were invented so that
people could change the programs run by the
computer. Finally computer research brought us
smaller, more useful computers, and eventually
the kinds of computers that we have today.
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