As with two competing technologies one will fail and the other will become standard and affordable.Remerber VHS/Betamax and bluray/HDDVD.I figure 2 years until we know.Any comments?
Becky_Roberts said:We'll be sure to let you know as and when we do...
The_Lhc said:Who is "we" in this context please?
John Duncan said:I suspect the first 'we' is the magazine, and the second 'we' is meant to read 'they'.
Hello and welcome to the forum btw, Becky
John Duncan said:I suspect the first 'we' is the magazine, and the second 'we' is meant to read 'they'.
Hello and welcome to the forum btw, Becky
John Duncan said:I suspect the first 'we' is the magazine, and the second 'we' is meant to read 'they'.
Hello and welcome to the forum btw, Becky
BenLaw said:I read as 'we' will let you know when 'we' know.
Becky_Roberts said:Both are happening, but more focus seems to be with 4K/LCD (LED) at the moment due to its market demand. Both Sony and Panasonic are, for the mean time, halting OLED production - it seems too costly and inefficient right now. At this stage it's mainly LG that's pushing Ultra HD 4K OLEDs and (hopefully) it's only a matter of time before 4K OLEDs enter into the mass market properly. We'll be sure to let you know as and when they do...
http://www.whathifi.com/news/lg-to-expand-ultra-hd-oled-tv-range-at-ces-2014
gel said:Which ever one Panasonic really supports.
The_Lhc said:gel said:Which ever one Panasonic really supports.
Is that before or after they pull out of TV manufacturing altogether?
gel said:I can't see it happening.
spiny norman said:gel said:I can't see it happening.
Yeah, they said that about pulling out of plasma. But the idea that whatever Panasonic backs will succeed is just nonsense: it used to have about 6% global TV market share, and I'm sure that number is now even smaller. Panasonic's now well on the wrong side of 5%, behind Sony, TCL, Toshiba and Hisense.
So when it comes to Panasonic's TV market influence, that ship sailed a long tome ago.
What Samsung (19%), or LG (14%), or the Chinese manufacturers (big six brands together accounting for over 20% of the market) decide to back – now we're talking!
And right now LG is looking increasingly like a lone OLED voice in a wilderness strewn with LED-lit LCD screens.
gel said:I still reckon Panasonic will be the favourite amongst AV buffs though, if not TV owners in general.
spiny norman said:gel said:I still reckon Panasonic will be the favourite amongst AV buffs though, if not TV owners in general.
Yeah, and doesn't that sound like a business plan? 'OK guys, we're going for a small percentage of a small percentage of a niche market – this time next year, Rodney-san, we'll be miwyunaires'
:doh:
The_Lhc said:Becky_Roberts said:We'll be sure to let you know as and when we do...
Who is "we" in this context please?
Andy Clough said:The_Lhc said:Becky_Roberts said:We'll be sure to let you know as and when we do...
Who is "we" in this context please?
Becky is our new staff writer, I'll remind her to add that to her signature as per House Rules.
gel said:spiny norman said:gel said:I can't see it happening.
Yeah, they said that about pulling out of plasma. But the idea that whatever Panasonic backs will succeed is just nonsense: it used to have about 6% global TV market share, and I'm sure that number is now even smaller. Panasonic's now well on the wrong side of 5%, behind Sony, TCL, Toshiba and Hisense.
So when it comes to Panasonic's TV market influence, that ship sailed a long tome ago.
What Samsung (19%), or LG (14%), or the Chinese manufacturers (big six brands together accounting for over 20% of the market) decide to back – now we're talking!
And right now LG is looking increasingly like a lone OLED voice in a wilderness strewn with LED-lit LCD screens.
Interesting stats, Norman. I still reckon Panasonic will be the favourite amongst AV buffs though, if not TV owners in general.
spiny norman said:gel said:I still reckon Panasonic will be the favourite amongst AV buffs though, if not TV owners in general.
Yeah, and doesn't that sound like a business plan? 'OK guys, we're going for a small percentage of a small percentage of a niche market – this time next year, Rodney-san, we'll be miwyunaires'
:doh: