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UPDATED: Vendors Call For Retail Health Check
Vendors in Australia have called on QBE Insurance to assess the health of several retailers including Clive Peeters, JB Hi Fi and Harvey Norman. The vendors have also told ChannelNews that they are set to get tough with several retail chains in Australia.
 
 
TVS & LARGE DISPLAY / INDUSTRY

  OLED To Replace Plasma & LCD TV 42" By 2010

By David Richards | Monday | 05/11/2007

The flat screen battle is hotting up with vendors now committing dollars to OLED TV production. Many believe that it is technology that will replace current plasma and LCD TVs due to its improved quality output.

In what looks set to become the technology that will eventually replace LCD and Plasma, Samsung has announced that it will produce a 40in OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) TV by 2010.

Samsung is part of a growing band of manufacturers supporting the new technology, which offers the promise of screens that not only look around 10 times sharper than LCD or Plasma but also uses far less energy. A contrast ratio of 1,000,000 to 1 far exceeds anything existing technologies can offer and video relay 1,000 times faster than LCD promises blur free fast action pictures.

OLED technology is based on organic materials which emit light naturally after an electrical charge is passed through them. The result is a device which uses around 40% less power than a traditional LCD TV.

Samsung's executive vice president, Ho Kyoon Chung recently gave the clearest insight yet into how the technology might develop, stating "Following small panels used in 2007, 3.5 to 7-inch panels will be applied to ultra mobile PCs, for example, in 2008. Then we will realise 14, 15 and 21-inch panels in 2009 and large 40 to 42-inch full HD OLED TVs in 2010."

Samsung joins big industry players like Sony who are developing OLED displays and Toshiba who plan to sell a 30in OLED TV by 2009.OLED technology has been teasing the market for years, looking both tantalizingly close and remotely distant all at once. Given the technology's achingly slow ramp, there have been questions about whether OLED displays could ever be produced cheaply enough to compete with LCDs on price without compromising the display advancements that give OLED an edge over LCD.

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