Archive for December, 2008

LG’s Upcoming LH95 is the Thinnest LCD TV Yet

LG plans to take the thinnest LCD TV crown at CES 2009 with the LH95, which supports 240Hz and a 2 million to 1 contrast ratio.

So if you want THE thinnest LCD at this point in time, this 24.8mm (0.97 inch) display is it. Until, of course, the next thinnest LCD TV comes out some time in 2009, and then you’ll be stuck with the second thinnest, then third thinnest, until one day you’re left with little miss fatty and you’re asking yourself why you spent so much money on such a heifer. Who wants that? Nobody, that’s who. [AVING via GizmoWatch via Fast Company]

Samsung’s 2009 HDTV Lineup Leaked

We’re not gonna have to wait until CES to see what TVs Samsung’s got up its sleeves for 2009, since AVForums has revealed everything in store:

Standard new features across the entire line include a bunch of menu and and setting tweaks, expanded and improved video processing options, dual USB ports and compatibility with a whole slew of new video formats and codecs up to 1080p.

Formats: MKV, WMV, VOB, AVI, TS, 3GP, MPG ASF
Codecs: XviD, DivX 3.11/4.x/5.1/6.0/, H.264 BP/MP/HP, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4 SP/ASP, Motion JPEG, Windows Media Video V9, VC1

(Our extensive guide to all that stuff is right here.)

Aaand here’s the complete lineup of LCD TVs for the US, with new models in the Series 3, 5 6 and brand new 7 lines:

Series 3
* LN19B360C5D
* LN22B360C5D
* LN26B360C5D
* LN32B360C5D

Series 5
* LN32B530P7F
* LN37B530P7F
* LN40B530P7F
* LN46B530P7F
* LN52B530P7F
* LN32B550K1F
* LN37B550K1F
* LN40B550K1F
* LN46B550K1F
* LN52B550K1F

Series 6
* LN40B610A5F
* LN46B610A5F
* LN52B610A5F
* LN32B650T1F
* LN37B650T1F
* LN40B650T1F
* LN46B650T1F
* LN55B650T1F

Series 7
* UN40B7000WF
* UN46B7000WF
* UN55B7000WF

Yes, there’s tons more where that came from. [AV Forums via Electronista]

Voting Question: Should the sims 2 work on this computer ?

——————
System Information
——————

Operating System: Windows Vistaâ„¢ Home Basic (6.0, Build 6001) Service Pack 1 (6001.vistasp1_gdr.080917-1612)
Language: English (Regional Setting: English)
System Manufacturer: ACER
System Model: Aspire M1640
BIOS: BIOS Date: 07/18/08 16:36:44 Ver: 08.00.15
Processor: Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU 450 @ 2.20GHz, ~2.2GHz
Memory: 766MB RAM
Page File: 1299MB used, 501MB available
Windows Dir: C:\Windows
DirectX Version: DirectX 10
DX Setup Parameters: Not found
DxDiag Version: 6.00.6001.18000 32bit Unicode

————
DxDiag Notes
————
Display Tab 1: No problems found.
Sound Tab 1: No problems found.
Sound Tab 2: No problems found.
Input Tab: No problems found.

——————–
DirectX Debug Levels
——————–
Direct3D: 0/4 (retail)
DirectDraw: 0/4 (retail)
DirectInput: 0/5 (retail)
DirectMusic: 0/5 (retail)
DirectPlay: 0/9 (retail)
DirectSound: 0/5 (retail)
DirectShow: 0/6 (retail)

—————
Display Devices
—————
Card name: NVIDIA GeForce 7050 / NVIDIA nForce 620i
Manufacturer: NVIDIA
Chip type: GeForce 7050 / NVIDIA nForce 620i
DAC type: Integrated RAMDAC
Device Key: Enum\PCI\VEN_10DE&DEV_07E5&SUBSYS_01371025&REV_A2
Display Memory: 378 MB
Dedicated Memory: 250 MB
Shared Memory: 127 MB
Current Mode: 1440 x 900 (32 bit) (60Hz)
Monitor: Generic PnP Monitor
Driver Name: nvd3dum.dll,nvwgf2um.dll
Driver Version: 7.15.0011.7530 (English)
DDI Version: 10
Driver Attributes: Final Retail
Driver Date/Size: 6/20/2008 19:34:00, 5689344 bytes
WHQL Logo’d: Yes
WHQL Date Stamp:
Device Identifier: {D7B71E3E-44A5-11CF-FF6E-3C2102C2CA35}
Vendor ID: 0×10DE
Device ID: 0×07E5
SubSys ID: 0×01371025
Revision ID: 0×00A2
Revision ID: 0×00A2
Video Accel:
Deinterlace Caps: {6CB69578-7617-4637-91E5-1C02DB810285}: Format(In/Out)=(YUY2,YUY2) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_PixelAdaptive
{5A54A0C9-C7EC-4BD9-8EDE-F3C75DC4393B}: Format(In/Out)=(YUY2,YUY2) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY
{335AA36E-7884-43A4-9C91-7F87FAF3E37E}: Format(In/Out)=(YUY2,YUY2) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_BOBVerticalStretch
{B338D50D-A64A-4790-AC01-475B64252A78}: Format(In/Out)=(YUY2,YUY2) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_BOBVerticalStretch
{6CB69578-7617-4637-91E5-1C02DB810285}: Format(In/Out)=(UYVY,UYVY) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_PixelAdaptive
{5A54A0C9-C7EC-4BD9-8EDE-F3C75DC4393B}: Format(In/Out)=(UYVY,UYVY) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY
{335AA36E-7884-43A4-9C91-7F87FAF3E37E}: Format(In/Out)=(UYVY,UYVY) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_BOBVerticalStretch
{B338D50D-A64A-4790-AC01-475B64252A78}: Format(In/Out)=(UYVY,UYVY) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_BOBVerticalStretch
{6CB69578-7617-4637-91E5-1C02DB810285}: Format(In/Out)=(YV12,0×32315659) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_PixelAdaptive
{5A54A0C9-C7EC-4BD9-8EDE-F3C75DC4393B}: Format(In/Out)=(YV12,0×32315659) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY
{335AA36E-7884-43A4-9C91-7F87FAF3E37E}: Format(In/Out)=(YV12,0×32315659) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_BOBVerticalStretch
{B338D50D-A64A-4790-AC01-475B64252A78}: Format(In/Out)=(YV12,0×32315659) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_BOBVerticalStretch
{6CB69578-7617-4637-91E5-1C02DB810285}: Format(In/Out)=(NV12,0×3231564e) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(0,0,0) Caps=VideoProcess_YUV2RGB VideoProcess_StretchX VideoProcess_StretchY DeinterlaceTech_PixelAdaptive
{5A54A0C9-C7EC-4BD9-8EDE-F3C75DC4393B}: Format(In/Out)=(NV12,0×3231564e) Frames(Prev/Fwd/Back)=(
SIMS 2 ——————-
* 1000 MHz processor
* 256 MB RAM
* Windows(R) XP, Windows ME, Windows 98 or Windows 2000 Operating System.
* At least 1.5 GB of additional hard drive space (5.0 GB total is required if installing both The Sims 2 and The Sims 2 Nightlife at the same time.)
* A T&L-capable video card with at least 32 MB of video RAM.

Resolved Question: How can I change the resolution on my Dell S199WFP monitor from 1152 x 864 to 1440 x 900?

I have a Dell Dimension 4550 with Windows XP and just bought a Dell SE 199 WFP flat screen monitor for it. I have been trying to set my screen resolution to 1440 x 900, the advertised setting. When I first started, the resolution was set at 1280 x 1024, but in trying to change it, I have somehow changed it to a maximum of 1152 x 864…STILL not the 1440 x 900 I want. I have installed the recommended new driver and also downloaded and installed the latest driver for the display adapter, which is a 32MB ATI Rage 128 Ultra. I have rebooted and checked the graphics card.

Can anybody PLEASE tell me how to fix this?

Resolved Question: How can I change the resolution on my Dell S199WFP monitor from 1152 x 864 to 1440 x 900?

I have a Dell Dimension 4550 with Windows XP and just bought a Dell SE 199 WFP flat screen monitor for it. I have been trying to set my screen resolution to 1440 x 900, the advertised setting. When I first started, the resolution was set at 1280 x 1024, but in trying to change it, I have somehow changed it to a maximum of 1152 x 864…STILL not the 1440 x 900 I want. I have installed the recommended new driver and also downloaded and installed the latest driver for the display adapter, which is a 32MB ATI Rage 128 Ultra.

Can anybody PLEASE tell me how to fix this?

How the Dual Display Works In the IBM ThinkPad W700ds, Part II

We’ve already seen a clip with the Lenovo W700ds laptop popping out its secondary monitor. But here’s much better clip that really gives you a real idea of how it works.

The things we noted: the second display does slide out fairly smoothly and it takes just a few seconds for the monitors to readjust to the dual format. But from what we can tell, the second display also looks dimmer and possibly presents colors differently than the main display—though we can’t speak for its calibration. So yeah, it may be a novelty. But we’ve seen worse novelties. [GottaBeMobile]

The Case For Small TVs

Common thought is to get a big TV. Hell, I want two. But instead, I put a 23-inch set in my livingroom for two months to see what it would be like.

digg_skin = ‘compact’; digg_bgcolor = ‘#f1f8fa’; digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/gadgets/HDTVs_The_Case_For_Small_TVs’;

I was curious what it would be like. I mean, I had my reasons, but none of them were really great, to be honest.

Small TVs use less power, although not as much as you’d expect. For example, David Katzmaier, TV dude from CNet explained to me that in one example, comparing a 32-inch LCD by Samsung to its 52-inch equivalent, its power consumption jumps only 68% for 168% more real estate. Not bad.

Small TVs are cheaper. Average prices on Amazon for a set in the 22-29 inch range hover around 500 dollars; sets over 50 inches go for 5-10 times that much for about 4x the real estate. There’s a lot of value in smaller sets. But in this economy, some analysts believe that small TV sets won’t get any cheaper, while bigger sets will get a bit less expensive. So the relative value these days is somewhat diminished.

If I had a real reason to make the switch, it was social.

I always grew up with a TV as the overriding piece of furniture in my livingspace; the TV was and is the 800 pound gorilla, or elephant in the room, with all seating beholden to the screen. In a house arranged like this, it feels like the room belongs to the TV, standing over everything in its domain. A room like that looks like it belongs to an overgrown geek (true) and never feels like it belongs to an adult and I was starting to feel self conscious about it. A small TV would not dominate the room.

Still, using a 23-incher is quite a stretch down. My couch is about 8 feet back from the entertainment system, and excellent for slouching and watching. According to most sizing charts, the room I sit in should have a TV between 32 and 50 inches. I usually use a 52 or higher as I review sets.

Watching tiny TV was surprisingly good at first.

Standard definition TV looked perfect almost on every channel, because pixels were smaller. From 9 feet away, the 23-inch set made standard def look almost as good as HD on the 50+ inch sets. I could not differentiate between HD and SD at times, depending on the material. Wii also looked good, with its standard def output.

The same went for DVDs. Sorta. There is no doubt that the cinematic experience is diminished exponentially on a screen you have to squint to see finer detail on. This was less a resolution issue (res appeared great) than a size issue. I just didn’t feel the impact of Batman base jumping off of Hong Kong skyscrapers in IMAX on a screen smaller than the monitor on some PCs, from across the room.

The opposite happened when I played Xbox 360. It is here where resolution is not used, as on blu-rays, to display finer gradients of hair and particles of rock or more detailed skin or exploding cars. Man made textures on a small TV are fine. But here’s what you miss: The Xbox and most modern games make deliberate use of every pixel in two facets, which make it impossible to watch on a small screen, no matter if HD or not: perspective and interface. The fonts and menus and prompts and health gauges and reticules on most games are ridiculously detailed. And perspective was the defining drawback moment, especially when playing the zombie killing game Left for Dead: when you’re sniping a zombie from 100 meters and the clouds roll over the moon, and the greys crush to black, can you see the zombie clearly enough as he runs towards you from the distance to make the shot your life depends on? On a small TV, like this, I pulled up a chair and sat 5 feet away, transforming the experience into a sort of PC gaming event. With split screen, we were all 3 feet away and very cozy, thank you.

Even with the eyesight of an eagle, there’s only so much resolution the eye can take in from a distance, while looking at anything but a huge TV.

But rather than conclude that we all need bigger TVs, I’m going to say that PS3 and Xbox owners need them first. Second, movie buffs, but movie buffs might want to consider projectors. For most of us, just watching TVs and flicks, I can see how a smaller set would do well enough most of the time. Most of the time. For someone else.

Lightning Review: ZVOX 550 Speaker System and Flat Panel Stand

The gadget: The ZVOX 550, the only speaker system we’ve ever seen designed to hold a 50″ flat panel TV while packing a 60W amp, 5.25″ sub, and five 2″ speakers in one frame.

The Price: $550

The Verdict: Almost soooo good. While soundbars are ever more popular, in many cases, they fit awkwardly in front of your television. I fit a 40″ LCD on the ZVOX box comfortably. The ZVOX feels very stable—probably more solid than my entertainment center. So that part works.

As for the sounds itself—also excellent. I simply don’t have the equipment available to compare it to other $550 audio systems (and really, there’s no perfect analog product). But I will say that highs, mids and lows were all crisply represented across a variety of genres. The bass, especially, made me more than happy to forgo an extra standalone subwoofer (which the system supports should you need it). And I easily filled my tiny apartment with sound.

The cabinet does vibrate a bit, though it’s very quite unless you crank the bass up to max. The only reason I’d be wary is that the shaking might damage a TV over time…but my immediate, visceral response is that things are fine.

Where the cabinet falls short to me is its inputs. It supports two sources of stereo RCA plugs. And while it offers some virtual surround tech along with the option to mix the two sources, it’s just not going to work for many (or most) general home theater purposes without an optical input. Even if the ZVOX only technically plays back 2.1 channel sound, it’s still a vital connectivity option.
Also, while I appreciate the minimal design, the tiny remote coupled with a single LED light on the system to signal power/remote commands, it’s tough to know where your levels are (Is treble maxed? How much louder can I crank this?).

So given the omission of optical inputs and a limited UI, the ZVOX 550 is not quite the universal home theater product that it could be. But if you want an excellent one-cabinet audio system that can hold your giant LCD, then it may be worth the few inconveniences. [ZVOX]

Update: ZVOX has responded with this note:

I hope you don’t mind, but I’d like to address the “lack of multiple/digital inputs” issue that many editors comment on regarding the Z-Base 550. I feel the need to share some insight on our design decision-making process at ZVOX:

Our primary aim is to combine great sound with simplicity. The typical TV viewer, in our opinion, is very comfortable using their TV set as a switching/control center. That’s what they’ve done for years — plug everything into the TV, and use the TV remote to switch back and forth. It’s intuitive and really simple. And modern TVs have loads of inputs of all kinds. At ZVOX, we say “use ‘em!” I can connect my DVD player, Fios box and my kid’s Playstation 3 to my Panasonic LCD TV, then run the analog audio out from the TV to the ZVOX. The fact that the digital-to-analog conversion is taking place in the TV, rather than in the ZVOX system six inches away, doesn’t seem to make any audible difference. The system sounds great. It has all the switching I need. And it’s simple to use.

If we had included 3-4 digital inputs and switching functionality, our costs would go up (Micronas boards, HDMI costs, and last-but-not-least…Dolby royalties — which for smaller manufacturers are quite substantial) and, more importantly, the switching process becomes non-intuitive. A simple example (which presumes I don’t have a Harmony or other smart, macro-programmed remote): I’m watching cable and want switch to DVD. If the DVD’s video is going to the TV, and it’s digital audio signal is going directly to the ZVOX, I need to switch the video with my TV remote and the audio with my ZVOX remote. If I (or my wife) forget, then we end up watching DVD video while listening the cable box audio. (My wife HATES when this happens!!)

We could get around this by adding a bunch of HDMI inputs and outputs — as well as a front panel display (like the Yamaha YSP-4000), but frankly, the ZVOX 425 might then sell for the same $1400 as the Yamaha. I’d rather keep our price point relatively low, while still being able to build cabinets of real wood and use top-notch drivers and amplifiers.

Enjoy the holidays!

Tom Hannaher, ZVOX

LG Transmissive/Reflective LCD Will Work Just as Well Outdoors as In

Transmissive and reflective illumination? Is this somehow exciting? Although they’ve done their best to make it sound boring, LG is onto something pretty significant here: a display that suits use indoors and out.

LCDs are generally illuminated in one of two ways, either with a backlight, which pumps light through the pixels from the rear, or through reflection, which uses ambient light, ideally natural, to provide contrast. Transmissive screens, as seen in laptops, cell phones and LCD TVs, work well in low-light situations and artificial light, but utterly fail in direct sunlight, where reflective displays thrive.

Both technologies are fairly mature, but to date hadn’t been combined in any usable way. LG’s Backlight Data Signal Switching Technology will allow users to switch between the indoor and outdoor modes with the press of a button. As an added bonus, switching to the reflective mode reduces LCD power consumption by about 75%. The initial run will be a 14.1in display for notebooks, but there’s no reason we shouldn’t soon see this in a variety of sizes and applications. [Akihabara]

Sony Is Shipping All This Stuff to CES

I can only imagine the resulting tower of unpacked boxes. [Sony Blog]