gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

August 21, 2006

Samsung’s 70-inch LCD TV biggest yet to hit retail

Filed under: 70-inch,LcdTv,Samsung,biggest,largest,lcd,lcd tv — Paul Miller @ 10:20 am

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Sure, those 100-inch LCDs are all well and good if your living room happens to encompass a large international tradeshow at all times, but if you’d prefer an LCD TV you can actually purchase and lug home for reals, Samsung’s new 70-incher is your biggest option yet. They’re busting out this monster in the first half of 2007, and are packing in all the niceties like a 2000:1 contrast ratio, a sub-8ms response time, 600 nits of brightness and of course a juicy 1080p resolution. The display bests the 65-incher from Sharp which currently holds the LCD throne, and Samsung will be showing it off at the upcoming International Meeting on Information Displays on the 23rd of this month — where we doubt it will fail to impress.

[Via HD Beat, thanks Nandini]

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July 25, 2006

Newest “World’s Largest HDTV” at Tokyo racetrack

Filed under: World'sBiggest,biggest,display,largest,racetrack,tokyo,world's biggest — Darren Murph @ 3:38 pm

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Apparently bigger is always better in the realm of giant HDTVs, and the leapfrog game to have the largest — even for just a few months — continues as Mitsubishi has constructed a baffling 8,066 square-foot display at Tokyo Racecourse in Japan. By far the biggest Diamond Vision unit ever built, it trumps their own creation at Turner Field in Atlanta by spanning 218 feet wide by 37 feet high and allowing for 3 races to be shown at once. The two previous title-holders were Miami’s Dolphin Stadium at 137 x 50 feet and Texas’ Longhorn Stadium at 134 x 55 feet. Controversy over the true king will surely arise due to Tokyo’s set only rising 37 feet in height and rocking an unorthodox 5.89 aspect ratio, but it does indeed sport Hi-Vision (1080), making it a legitmate HDTV. Personally, we’d be able to get more use from a couple plasmas, but if you’ve got the space acreage, there probably isn’t a better way to spend $28 million.

[Via HD Beat]

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