I hear this is quite good.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a … 6826158082
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a … 6826158082

What kind of preposterous thing is that to claim? I've never said anything of the sort.GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
Because you said opinion that Tegra-like devices will not sell good unless they are expensive smart phones. I post comment about that.mikkel wrote:
Why are you saying this to me?GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
Probably trying to point out its not that uncommon to carry at least two devices with you all the time. Usually its phone and IPOD/similar these days. When devices such as Tegra based get more popular and down in the price, that iPOD/similar could easily switch to something more powerful and advanced. No real problem there.
If you think that no one should be talking to you, why are you here?
Last edited by GC_PaNzerFIN (2009-10-29 14:42:16)
Have you lost the plot?GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
You posted opinion and I post comment like the one guy did too. PERIOD AND THAT SIMPLE.
wtf? I am not allowed to post opinions now then huh? This is fking internet forum. I dunno what other idea you seem to have put in your head....mikkel wrote:
Have you lost the plot?GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
You posted opinion and I post comment like the one guy did too. PERIOD AND THAT SIMPLE.
no.........tazz. wrote:
I'm getting the surround sound logitech headphones for xmas
I have this. Two in fact. It's meh for PC... You need to get the significantly more expensive Pro version to compare with soundboards. But, for the PS3, it works pretty good.
TSI wrote:
no.........tazz. wrote:
I'm getting the surround sound logitech headphones for xmas
Last edited by GC_PaNzerFIN (2009-10-31 05:02:14)
Well the OLEDs are superior in every way and cheaper to manufacture so I could call plasma tech obsolete. They just gotta make heck lot of more OLED tech manufacturing plants because demand will skyrocket negating the benefits of lower manufacturing costs to consumers..Sup wrote:
I wouldn't say obsolete. LCDs are better in every aspect but plasma screens got pretty cheap nowadays especially if you want a big screen they are cheaper than LCDs.GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
Plasma TV's just are obsolete tech.
Last edited by GC_PaNzerFIN (2009-10-31 07:53:40)
I wouldn't say that they're superior in every way yet. There's still the issue of biological degradation and the varying lifetimes of the different colour components. Of course these challenges will be overcome, but as of today OLED still has some pretty significant issues.GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
Well the OLEDs are superior in every way and cheaper to manufacture so I could call plasma tech obsolete. They just gotta make heck lot of more OLED tech manufacturing plants because demand will skyrocket negating the benefits of lower manufacturing costs to consumers..Sup wrote:
I wouldn't say obsolete. LCDs are better in every aspect but plasma screens got pretty cheap nowadays especially if you want a big screen they are cheaper than LCDs.GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
Plasma TV's just are obsolete tech.
Yeah there have been some manufacturing issues. Some of them have now been overcome. Plasma's degrade too so they are pretty similar in that way atm.mikkel wrote:
I wouldn't say that they're superior in every way yet. There's still the issue of biological degradation and the varying lifetimes of the different colour components. Of course these challenges will be overcome, but as of today OLED still has some pretty significant issues.
The issue is particularly with the blue colours in OLEDs, as they occur very rarely biologically. The current blue OLED components have a lifetime of 5 years at 8 hours per day, but being organic, they deteriorate, and they do so linearly. The problem with this is that while after two and a half years the blue components will emit light at half of the original intensity, the green components, for example, will emit light at ~83.5% of their original intensity, as the effective lifetime of the green components is three times longer. It takes frequent advanced measuring and calibration that may have to be done manually by a calibration device to maintain an even colour balance in these displays.GC_PaNzerFIN wrote:
Yeah there have been some manufacturing issues. Some of them have now been overcome. Plasma's degrade too so they are pretty similar in that way atm.mikkel wrote:
I wouldn't say that they're superior in every way yet. There's still the issue of biological degradation and the varying lifetimes of the different colour components. Of course these challenges will be overcome, but as of today OLED still has some pretty significant issues.
Can't quite remember what was the approximate lifetime of OLED atm, somewhere about 5 years I think. When it gets to 10y average lifetime the panels can go mainstream.
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 6#p2872316CapnNismo wrote:
Certainly, but these are all problems that plasma had in the very beginning. Remember all the issues people were having with their plasma TVs? They're all fixed now, for the most part. OLED really only hit the market for the consumer, what, a year ago? Maybe?