As mentioned during CES HiSense is now launching the second generation of its hybrid Phosphor Laser front projection TV. The first generation was released in 2014 and made for a 100" HD TV. This second generation is of course 4K.
Hisense Group, China's largest TV manufacturer in terms of sales volume, global vice president Lin Lan made his promise in Paris at the occassion of the EURO 2016 Football Championship between Portugal and France this Sunday. Debuting what it refers to as the world's first 4K wide-angle laser cinema television. Hisense being a major sponsor of the event.
"the ultimate goal of technologies is to recreate cost advantages." Making it possible for every family to afford a home cinema is the company's dream and strategy for Hisense to take a leading position among television makers. Once the dream is achieved, Hisense expects to become the undisputed leader in the world's color TV market.
HiSense is emphasising the cost advantage it offers compared to regular 100" flatpanels, but of course this is true of any front projection set-up. The question is how well does it hold its ground to the expensive flatpanels. And other 4K (capable) front projection set-ups. I explicity speak of front-projection TV or set-up, as a special screen is to be included to make it a TV and not just a projector. Any anti-reflective and/or filtering capabilities of the screen will determine the TV's usability when ambient light is present.
According to HiSense LED backlight LCD televisions now dominate the market, with their larger, decidedly more expensive screens. 100-inch 4K LCD televisions are typically priced at 600,000 yuan (approx. US$90,000) per unit. The laser television launched by Hisense, achieving what the world hasn't achieved with 217 patented technologies, outstanding optical engines, high-resolution lens and high-precision manufacturing processes, delivers lightness and color saturation achieving or surpassing those of LCD TVs. More shockingly, the Hisense television is priced at just over US$10,000 per unit, 1/10 the sales price of LCD TVs with same size screens. The 4K LCOS laser projector rolled out earlier by Japan-based Sony are priced at US$50,000 per unit.
And of course $10,000 is well above the pricepoint that 'make it possible to have a large screen TV in every home'.
So, is this a quiet launch of the 0.67" 4.15 million pixel DMD with XPR Technology pixel shifting and image processing? Or what imaging technology is Hisense using, no details were provided sofar. Hisense could not tell me what imaging technology was used. HiSense keeps stressing it is its own development, so not an Coretronics ODM.
Hisense Group, China's largest TV manufacturer in terms of sales volume, global vice president Lin Lan made his promise in Paris at the occassion of the EURO 2016 Football Championship between Portugal and France this Sunday. Debuting what it refers to as the world's first 4K wide-angle laser cinema television. Hisense being a major sponsor of the event.
"the ultimate goal of technologies is to recreate cost advantages." Making it possible for every family to afford a home cinema is the company's dream and strategy for Hisense to take a leading position among television makers. Once the dream is achieved, Hisense expects to become the undisputed leader in the world's color TV market.
HiSense is emphasising the cost advantage it offers compared to regular 100" flatpanels, but of course this is true of any front projection set-up. The question is how well does it hold its ground to the expensive flatpanels. And other 4K (capable) front projection set-ups. I explicity speak of front-projection TV or set-up, as a special screen is to be included to make it a TV and not just a projector. Any anti-reflective and/or filtering capabilities of the screen will determine the TV's usability when ambient light is present.
According to HiSense LED backlight LCD televisions now dominate the market, with their larger, decidedly more expensive screens. 100-inch 4K LCD televisions are typically priced at 600,000 yuan (approx. US$90,000) per unit. The laser television launched by Hisense, achieving what the world hasn't achieved with 217 patented technologies, outstanding optical engines, high-resolution lens and high-precision manufacturing processes, delivers lightness and color saturation achieving or surpassing those of LCD TVs. More shockingly, the Hisense television is priced at just over US$10,000 per unit, 1/10 the sales price of LCD TVs with same size screens. The 4K LCOS laser projector rolled out earlier by Japan-based Sony are priced at US$50,000 per unit.
And of course $10,000 is well above the pricepoint that 'make it possible to have a large screen TV in every home'.
So, is this a quiet launch of the 0.67" 4.15 million pixel DMD with XPR Technology pixel shifting and image processing? Or what imaging technology is Hisense using, no details were provided sofar. Hisense could not tell me what imaging technology was used. HiSense keeps stressing it is its own development, so not an Coretronics ODM.
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