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Panasonic Sets Price For New 3-D TVs

Manufacturing.Net - March 10, 2010

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Panasonic Corp. on Wednesday revealed the price for its first 3-D TV set, confirming that $3,000 is about what it takes to be among the first to watch 3-D movies in the home.

The Japanese company put its first 3-D sets on sale at an event in New York on Wednesday. Panasonic's suggested retail price is $2,900 for a 50-inch plasma set, one pair of glasses and a 3-D Blu-ray player. An extra pair of glasses costs $150.

South Korean competitor Samsung Electronics Co. announced Tuesday that its 3-D sets would go on sale this week. For $3,000, buyers get a 46-inch set, two pairs of glasses, a 3-D Blu-ray player and a 3-D copy of "Monsters vs. Aliens." There's also a 55-inch set available -- it's $3,300 for the set alone.

Both manufacturers plan to expand their 3-D lines rapidly. Rivals are on their heels: LG Electronics Inc. plans to put its 3-D sets on sale in May and Sony Corp. is bringing out its 3-D sets this summer.

The sets can switch between 3-D and regular 2-D mode, which doesn't require glasses.

There's a dearth of movies on 3-D discs, but studios are rushing to put them out. On Wednesday, Twentieth Century Fox, the studio arm of News Corp., said it would make "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs" its debut title in 3-D Blu-ray.


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$150 per set of glasses!?!?!  3/10/2010 4:25:00 PM
This means that the glasses are ACTIVE, of course. The screen uses a sequential field approach to 3D. If it is going to give you a good image, then it's pumping 60 non-interlaced frames per second, and activating the left eye for all the (let us say) even frames, and the right eye sees all teh odd frames. This is NOT how 3D is typically encoded on DVDs, which use a red/cyan encoding (new-style Anaglyph). You can get great color and resolution on the Blu-Ray systems, but (obviously) at a price!!
$150 for a pair of glasses?? with this economy?  3/10/2010 4:58:00 PM
ONE COMMENT! ARE U CRAZY????


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