Samsung LE40C750 40-inch Widescreen Full HD 1080p 200Hz Motion
Plus Allshare 3D Ready Internet LCD TV with Freeview HD
Samsung LE46C750 46-inch Widescreen Full HD 1080p 200Hz Motion
Plus Allshare 3D Ready Internet LCD TV with Freeview HD
Samsung PS50C7000 50-inch Widescreen Full HD 1080p 3D Ready Internet Plasma TV
with Freeview HD
3D TVs for your home...
After many years of speculation and prototype development, television manufacturers have finally produced 3D models that will work in people's sitting rooms at some expensive, but a not too ridiculous, price. By October 2010, 1.6 million Sky customers could in theory, be watching Premiership football matches in full 3D from the comfort of their living room, as well as ballet performances. Balls will appear to come flying out of the screen, while viewers will feel they are in the front row of the stalls at Sadler's Wells.
*** A record 10m televisions were sold in the UK in 2009
CES 2009: 3D television 'by next year' LG, the Korean company, will be the first manufacturer to release its 3D model, a 47 inch LCD screen, expected to cost about £2,000. Viewers will need to wear polarised dark glasses to experience broadcasts in three dimensions. Samsung and Sony also announced they were bringing their own versions to market by the summer of this year, along with 3D Blu-ray players, allowing film fans to enjoy the 3D spectaculars show in cinemas during 2009, such as Avatar and Up, in their own homes.
Samsung and Sony's models use LED screens, considered to give a crisper picture, and are therefore expected to retail for about £3,000 or possibly more. The manufacturers released details at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas ending years of speculation, when 3D was dismissed as a gimmick by many in the industry. Sir Howard Stringer, Sony's chief executive, joked, as he unveiled the range of 3D Bravia televisions, "this whole thing is turning in to the CES 3D show".
3D TV's will hit the shelves of John Lewis and Currys, in time for October when Sky will start broadcasting programmes in three dimensions on a dedicated channel that will be available to anyone who has its most expensive Sky HD package. There are currently 1.6 million customers who have a Sky HD box and it's still not clear whether Sky will charge extra for receiving the 3D broadcasts and the box will not need upgrading.
LG's head of marketing for Home Entertainment, Stephen Gater LG UK, quoted: "No one can escape the buzz and excitement around 3D TV's. We’re witnessing the begining of dramatic change in how people view TV's – this is the dawn of a new dimension. With Sky’s strong commitment to 3D broadcasting, 3D TV's in the home are set to become a reality".
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