In the loop part 1

In the loop part 1 movie

Roughly one-third of HDTV owners fall in this category. They seem to think that high-def owners have figured it out. And TV manufacturers and CE retailers do next to nothing to help out. Their view: They ve sold the set so why spend their time and money ensuring that people use it to its fullest? However, that s a myopic view. If more people had high-def tuners, that would be more people out there in the marketplace spreading the word about HD s wonderful picture and sound. And that would lead to more people buying high-def sets. Not Enough HD Programming Not enough high-def programming, you ask? How can that be? Aren t there dozens of HD channels? Well, yes, that s true. But the four major broadcast networks, which still dominate primetime ratings, still produce far too many shows in standard-def. For instance, on CBS, The CBS Morning Show, The Amazing Race, 48 Hours and several other shows are still not in high-def. And on NBC, under spendthrift CEO Jeff Zucker, sometimes the entire primetime lineup is not in HD. For instance, unscripted shows such as Deal or No Deal and The Biggest Loser are delivered in deadly dull SD. The result is that the average viewer is not as excited about high-def as he could be. The Blu-ray/HD DVD Debacle The industry s food fight over which high-def disc format would prevail unquestionably hurt the HDTV industry. The high-def disc, which offers a picture superior to anything on cable, satellite or a telco service, is a great showcase for the technology. However, the format war slowed consumer interest in high-def discs and now that Blu-ray has prevailed, the studios stubborn insistence to price Blu-ray movies at 5-10 more than their standard-def editions continues to delay consumer acceptance. Blu-ray should be a catalyst for selling more high-def sets, in the loop part 1 movie it s often just a reminder of how costly high-def can be. High-Definition TV has come a long way in the last 10 years. But the high-def industry from retailers to TV makers to TV providers to the Hollywood studios need to congratulate each other less and start selling more. They need to stop saying that high-def is a success and start admitting that more needs to be done. If they don t, with the current economic conditions, HDTV may have hit a wall. Wednesday, February 11, 2009, 01:20 PM The discount TV maker will focus exclusively on LCD. Washington, February 11, 2009 Vizio says it has stopped producing Plasma High-Definition sets and will now concentrate entirely on its LCD series, according to the New York Times. In an article published today, Vizio s co-founder, Laynie Newsome, told the newspaper that the company is nearly out of existing Plasma inventory, in the loop part 1 movie it s still selling Plasma sets at its web site. And the low-cost TV maker has no plans to resume Plasma production. Newsome explained the company s decision by saying that Plasma does not sell as well as LCD in part because its picture does not look as good in retail showrooms. Generally, Plasma sets look better in dark rooms while LCD sets fare better in well-lit rooms, such as electronics stores. Vizio s decision is another blow to the Plasma HDTV which has lagged behind the LCD in sales over the past two years for a variety of reasons. Vizio has become a top seller of new TVs because of its lower prices and consumer-friendly promotions. The Times notes that Vizio s departure leaves just three large-volume Plasma makers in the United States: market leader Panasonic, Samsung and LG Electronics.

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