HDTV Projector



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How to Buy a Plasma, LCD or Rear Projection Television

How to buy a Flat Screen Television in 6 easy steps:


1.How much do you want to spend? Give yourself a price range and stick to it . For
example if you are looking to spend no more than $3000 only look at televisions in
that range. And remember you get what you pay for in the world of flat screen
televisions. If you get a Plasma Display for under $2000 remember that it will not
have a picture like a Plasma that sells for $4000. Here is a list of price ranges and
screens available in those ranges : $1500 - $2500 : will get you a decent EDTV 42″
Plasma made by a Top brand name, or

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a HDTV LCD in the 20″ to 30″ range, and a
low end HDTV DLP or LCD projection


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A Buyer’s Guide to Regular Tube TVs

Traditional CRT television screens have a number of important advantages over the newer technologies, not only in terms of the cost to buy them but in the ongoing costs of ownership as well. For instance, while a replacement light source for a DLP TV can cost as much as $500, an entire traditional tube television can be purchased for far less than the cost of that replacement bulb.


In fact it is the price that is the major selling point, and major advantage, of the traditional CRT TV. The prices of all televisions have been falling, but perhaps none have fallen quite so far and so fast as the prices for these traditional tube televisions. The

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...the receiver is such a key component, it's important to do your homework and select one that provides enough input and output connections to accommodate all your audio and video sources. Stereo, 5.1, 6.1, and 7.1-channel receivers explained Any receiver ...
smallest traditional tube televisions, those of 13 and less, can often be purchased for less than $100, and even the traditional 25 and 27 television models often retail for less than $300. In addition, many traditional tube televisions come with features like built in VCRs, built in DVD players and the like, making them even more versatile and useful.


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A Buyer’s Guide to DLP TVs

DLP technology is one of the fastest growing segments of the television market, and as of 2004 DLP TVs had captured a full 10% of the market for new televisions. DLP televisions use the same technology that has long been used to power projectors and similar devices. The technology that makes DLP televisions possible was invented at Texas Instruments back in 1987, and Texas Instruments remains the primary manufacturer of this technology to this day.


What makes DLP television technology so unique is that it uses a small digital micromirror device, or DMD, to tilt over 1.3 million tiny mirrors, each smaller than the width of a human hair. Each of these tiny mirrors

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is tilted either toward or away from the source of the light, thus producing the light and dark pixels that make up the display. DLP televisions are rear projection TVs, but they are not as large, as heavy or as bulky as the traditional rear projection televisions of years past.


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Consumer Reports - Projection-TV

The least expensive–and most common–type of jumbo TV is a rear-projection set. Some projection sets have three cathode-ray picture tubes (CRTs), smaller versions of the tubes used in conventional sets. The images from those small tubes are projected onto the back of a 42- to 70-plus-inch screen, hence the name rear-projection TV. Microdisplay sets use liquid-crystal display (LCD), digital light processing (DLP), or liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) technology in place of CRTs. These TVs are slimmer, lighter, and more expensive than comparable CRT-based sets. More of them are appearing in stores, and their prices are starting to drop.


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Sony SXRD HDTV Review

One company that has been at the forefront of making high-quality HDTV s for quite a few years now is Sony, and here is a quick Sony SXRD HDTV review that might help you pick out the perfect HDTV for your home.


When picking out an HDTV, the sheer amount of selection can be mind boggling. There are so many different manufacturers out there and so many companies that you probably haven t even heard of making TV s that you have to wonder about the quality you re getting for the price, but you should certainly consider Sony SXRD HDTV’s among the best.


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