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Carbon Nanotube TV Update: Samsung!!!

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Kleegamefan

K. LEE GAIDEN
This is from a November 4, 2004 article....Samsung thinks they will release the first Nanotube FED to consumers(2006).... and they believe theay are ahead of all CNT TV competitors in development.......they have a working 38-inch display in their labs...

AFAIK, Motorola is further along than this are and they already have 60-inch prototype NEDs up and running @ their advanced development labs in Tempe AZ.....

At any rate, here is the Samsung Carbon Nanotube Field Emission Display update:

http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/04/11/mann1104.asp

Nanotech on Display
South Korea's Samsung leads the race to perfect flat-panel TVs built with carbon nanotubes. Will they be nanotech's first commercial hit?


By Charles C. Mann
November 2004

In the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, south of Seoul, South Korea, what looks from a distance like an ordinary 38-inch television plays an endless loop of commercials for James Bond movies. Like the displays increasingly common in American homes, it is a big, flat rectangle of color and motion in a high-tech plastic frame. But unlike the images on an ordinary TV, the ones on this lab model are generated by a layer of carbon nanotubes shooting electrons at a phosphor screen like so many tiny cannonballs. Around the world, television screens are emblems of stodgy domesticity. But this one is in the vanguard of tomorrow’s nanotechnological revolution: it could be the first commercial product that brings nanoscale electronics into the middle-class home.

Researchers around the world are racing to perfect this novel type of display, which should be brighter, sharper, and less power-hungry than current flat-panel TVs. For the moment, though, the Samsung institute appears to have the lead. “They are the ones to beat,” says Yahachi Saito, lead researcher of a rival group at Nagoya University in Japan. “They have moved very quickly.”

Samsung, and South Korean technology firms in general, are rarely thought of as the leading developers of hot new technologies. This is a stereotype, however, that the company is determined to change. “We are still identified, correctly, with low-cost manufacturing,” says Young Joon Gil, chief technology officer at the Samsung institute. But as competitors emerge from China and other east-Asian countries, he says, Samsung “must gradually move to high-profit, high-risk innovation to survive.”

Nanotechnology is the most important of the risky disciplines the company hopes to mine for new products, and the nanotube TV screens are its first fruits. Known as “field emission displays,” they should be in stores, Young says, by the end of 2006, comfortably ahead of the competition.

Meeting that prediction will not be easy. Simply taking field emission displays from the laboratory to the retail floor will require solving a host of tough technical problems. Moreover, current flat-panel displays, based on liquid-crystal and plasma technology, are constantly becoming better and cheaper, meaning nanotech researchers will have to work harder just to keep up. Even success would create its own set of problems, since Samsung—one of the world’s leading manufacturers of liquid-crystal and plasma displays, as well as ordinary cathode-ray-tube TVs—will be competing against itself.

Nanotech displays are thus both a harbinger of a technological revolution to come and an example of how a major electronics company—with lucrative, established markets to protect—is trying to manage and contain that revolution. “We believe we must master this field to grow,” Young says. “But at the same time we cannot let it wreck our company. We have to watch very carefully.”





Gunning for the Future
Field emission displays are an old idea that suddenly became more attractive in 1991, when Sumio Iijima, an electron-microscope specialist at NEC Research in Tsukuba, Japan, discovered that carbon molecules could link together into long, thin cylinders later dubbed nanotubes. (The “nano,” like the “nano” in “nanotechnology,” comes from “nanometer,” a billionth of a meter.) The tubes were like tiny sheets of carbon molecules that had been rolled up into cylinders one-ten-thousandth the width of a human hair. Scientists quickly learned that these unusual structures had a host of interesting properties, including great strength, and high electrical and thermal conductivity.


But what attracted Saito, the Nagoya researcher, to carbon nanotubes was the possibility that they could act as electron guns. Placed in a properly aligned electric field, theoretical physicists said, the little tubes should shoot out electrons like hoses emitting streams of water. Many materials emit electrons when sufficient voltage is applied; the difference, the physicists said, is that nanotubes should actually accelerate the particles along their lengths, which would allow them to emit electrons of sufficient energy to activate phosphors in very low-voltage fields. Saito, now a professor of quantum engineering, first publicly demonstrated this effect in 1998. Working with Noritake, a big Nagoya ceramics and electronics firm, he assembled a small array of nanotubes that shot electrons into a phosphor screen, creating a bright light.

Saito’s experiments had an obvious commercial target: the $61-billion-a-year world market in television sets. The cathode ray tubes inside traditional TVs have changed little since they were invented in the 1920s—in stark contrast to almost every other piece of consumer electronic equipment. They shoot electrons from the tips of wires onto phosphor screens, creating patterns of glowing dots that the human eye interprets as moving images. Cathode ray tubes are inherently bulky, because the electron gun must sit back far enough to hit the entire screen. As a result, the picture tube in a typical home-theater screen is a massive object that almost fills a room; manufacturers believe the devices would be more popular if they were more manageable.

To make thinner, lighter big-screen TVs, manufacturers have turned to plasma and liquid-crystal displays, but these have their own drawbacks, beginning with their high price (see “Screen Test,” p. 65). Plasma screens, for example, are vulnerable to “burn-in,” in which motionless images, if displayed for too long, become seared permanently into the glass. They also consume as much as 700 watts of power, enough to make some critics worry about the environmental consequences if the displays were widely adopted. In LCDs, meanwhile, pixels switch relatively slowly from one color to another, which causes fast-moving images to smear or leave ghosts as the cells fail to keep up with the action.

Field emission displays will, in theory, solve many of these problems. They aren’t vulnerable to burn-in, and they use much less power. At the same time, the pixels in a field emission display can turn on and off faster than those in a liquid-crystal display, meaning that fast-moving images don’t smear. And those images can be viewed from any angle, while liquid-crystal displays require viewers to be directly in front of the screen.

But getting carbon nanotubes to shoot electrons at a screen in an actual consumer TV will require scores of innovations in several fields—the kind of effort often best coordinated by very large companies. Indeed, about the time that Saito produced his first field emission display, he learned that he faced competition from an unlikely place: South Korea.


Beyond the Sweatshop
South of Seoul, the urban grit of the capital gives way to lush, rolling, low hills dotted with office parks that would not be out of place in a suburb of San Francisco or Boston. In the planned community of Kiheung, one especially large complex—a set of four low, parallel structures cut through by a central corridor—houses the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, probably Korea’s premier private research center.



The institute is largely the vision of Samsung chair Lee Kun Hee, who established it soon after he took the company’s helm in 1987. Samsung is one of South Korea’s chaebol, the giant family-controlled holding companies that still dominate the nation’s economy. At the time of Lee’s accession it was, like most Korean electronics companies, an exemplar of what is sometimes dismissively referred to as “sweatshop electronics”—taking advantage of the nation’s low wages to undercut manufacturers in wealthier areas. It sold most of its products as commodities to better-known corporations, many of them in nearby Japan, which stuck them in boxes and slapped their own names on them.

Lee, the third son of Samsung’s founder, argued that the company’s—and Korea’s—growing success would inevitably attract competition from even lower-wage nations, especially China. Samsung, he said, would have to enter new businesses to survive; “Change everything except your wife and children!” was his rallying cry. In practice, this meant concentrating on higher-end, higher-profit products. Samsung would have to become a brand name, a symbol of quality like Sony or Honda.

To that end, Lee argued, Samsung would have to innovate, which in turn meant drastically increasing its research and development efforts. The Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology was the logical result. Slowly but constantly expanded since its creation, the laboratory now employs 950 staff, about a quarter of whom work on Samsung’s core business of semiconductors (the company is the world’s biggest manufacturer of random-access memory chips). According to company representative Lee Hyunji, institute researchers collaborate with about 120 universities and research centers in 15 countries.

Samsung now sells cutting-edge products, from superthin DVD players to video game chips. It has become the world’s third-biggest cell-phone manufacturer, with a wildly popular premium line of handsets with crisp color screens. In a list of the “most admired” electronics companies of 2003, Fortune magazine ranked Samsung fourth in the world. Samsung spent $2.9 billion on R&D in 2003; gross sales that year for the Samsung group as a whole rose almost 11 percent from 2002, to about $55 billion.





Filling the Vacuum
Field emission displays exemplify the next step Samsung seeks to take in its corporate transformation from a high-tech competitor to an industry leader. “Display technology is hugely complex to begin with,” says Kim Jong Min, vice president and director of the materials lab at the institute. “And using nanotubes adds to that enormously, both because of the unavoidable problems that always come from exploring an unfamiliar area and the fact that here there is no model to follow.” According to Kim, nanotube-based field emission displays are so complex that no single firm can develop them by itself. In consequence, researchers around the world are splitting the technology into its components and informally assigning different groups to work on each one. Samsung, for instance, does not plan to make its own nanotubes, except for research purposes. Instead, it will buy them in powder form from Carbon Nanotechnologies, a Houston-based firm with a considerable arsenal of patents in the field. A gram of carbon nanotube powder, enough to make half a dozen 40-inch displays, cost $100 last year, Kim says, but will sell for less than $10 in two years. “That is a competition we won’t enter.”


Similarly, Samsung does not intend to focus on the glue that affixes the tiny tubes to their glassy base, itself a sticky technological challenge. The company is working with DuPont to come up with an adhesive that’s thin enough to spread, strong enough to hold the ultrathin tubes by their ends, resilient enough to retain its grip despite inevitable expansion and contraction from heat, and easy enough to remove that manufacturers can clean stray adhesive from the tops of the nanotubes, so they can spray out electrons.

Nor is the company trying to gain an advantage by developing the physical components of the display itself—the spacers that hold apart the top and bottom sheets of the screen, the high-vacuum packaging, the driver circuitry, and other standard field emission components and materials. Instead, it has joined a consortium of more than half a dozen European companies and universities created specifically to tackle those problems and incorporated the group’s early results into the 38-inch display now showing off Pierce Brosnan’s Bond-blue eyes.

Delegating these aspects of field emission display design still leaves plenty for Samsung to work on, beginning with the glass itself. The nanotubes have to shoot their electrons across a vacuum; otherwise they would be absorbed or deflected by air molecules. Yet making what amounts to a very wide, sheetlike vacuum chamber is difficult, because over a large area air pressure will tend to crush together the two sides of the screen. The obvious answer is to put a support pillar in the middle of the screen. But then, Saito explains, “you see the support in the middle of the picture.”

Equally problematic, in his view, is the thermal expansion and contraction of the display. When the nanotubes are emitting electrons, the display gets hotter, and all its materials expand; when the electron beam is off, they shrink. “The problem is how to accommodate the expansion,” Saito says. His team had to find materials whose thermal expansion coefficient was the same as that of glass, so that the entire display would expand and contract in concert.

Exactly how Samsung pulled all these pieces together is “our secret,” says Kim. “That’s what we do: we’re a company that makes devices.” But key to Samsung’s decision to focus on field emission displays, he admits, is the lucky fact that they can tolerate imprecision. With current technology, aligning the nanotubes across the back of the display is an inexact process. The tubes point in a jumble of different directions, and most are too broken or bent to emit electrons successfully. Fortunately, nanotubes are small: about 10,000 cover each pixel in the display. As a result, Kim says, “We expect that only 30 to 50 percent of them will work, but we only need 30 to 50 percent to light up the pixel and deceive the human eye.”

Samsung is pleased enough with the result to permit a journalist from Technology Review to be the first non-Korean reporter to visit the Advanced Institute of Technology. Walking through the institute’s maze of small fluorescent-lighted laboratories, each with its coterie of white-coated researchers and glowing computer screens, Kim says that the display consumes about 100 watts, about a third of the power required for an average plasma screen of comparable size. “That’s just for now,” he adds. A bare two millimeters thick, the glass of the screen is thin enough to make the display slimmer than anything now on the market.

Arriving at the display, Kim introduces it with the slight anxiety of a proud parent hoping that strangers will appreciate the special qualities of his offspring. The image is as sharp as those produced by traditional high-definition picture tubes with similar display sizes, though the screen has several small blank spots. (“Prototype difficulties,” Kim explains.) Asked whether the technology is almost ready for market, the scientists in the room look at each other uncertainly. Samsung, Kim finally says, has just begun to work on the real challenge in bringing nanotechnology to the world: making the product affordable. The economic problems, he says, “are much, much harder than the technological ones.”





Lucky $7
Samsung is not alone. Two hours away in Japan, Saito’s success—and fears of being eclipsed by Korea—led the government’s New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization to establish a $37 million, 2.5-year national project to crash-develop field emission displays. Launched in 2003, the project has four main participants: Hitachi; Asahi Glass; a Nagoya University-Noritake collaboration directed by Saito; and a joint effort by Mitsubishi, Kyoto University, Osaka University, and Osaka Prefecture University. “The Koreans are still ahead of us,” Saito says. “But we are working hard to catch up.”


So are a dozen other companies in Japan, Europe, and the United States. It is generally believed that the leaders are Noritake, Mitsubishi, Motorola, and the French Atomic Energy Commissariat’s Laboratory of Electronics and Information Technology in Grenoble. Motorola demonstrated a small prototype in 2002; last year, the French laboratory demonstrated several, as did a small, secretive Silicon Valley startup, cDream.

Nanotechnology is frequently described as a technology with the potential to capsize the established order. In a theory often touted by business consultants, an industry’s largest incumbents are unlikely to develop such technologies, for two reasons: first, they are less profitable in their initial stages, and second, they have the potential to undermine existing products. Eventually, a small startup does develop the technology, using its sharp technological edge to overwhelm the competition and ultimately rocking the establishment.

Whether field emission displays fit this model remains to be seen. Nanotubes have obvious technological advantages on paper, but in the marketplace they are far from overwhelming. Right now, 42-inch plasma displays typically retail for $2,500 to $3,500; large liquid-crystal displays range from about $5,500 to $7,000. But the cost of both technologies is plummeting. “The manufacturing cost per diagonal inch of plasma displays will be about $9 in 2005 and 2006,” Kim says. “But because we have startup costs, we have to beat that by a considerable margin—$7 a diagonal inch, say.”

Luckily for Samsung, production methods for field emission displays are similar enough to those for plasma displays that it can use one of its current fabrication plants to build the devices, avoiding the overhead costs of an expensive new factory. Yet if plasma displays keep getting cheaper, Kim says, “we will lose our opportunity,” and field emission displays will not replace them. And even if Samsung reaches the magic $7 number, he says, to stay competitive it’ll have to shoot past it, to perhaps $5 per inch. Nanotechnology can be “a disruptive technology for displays,” Kim says. “But the conventional methods can disrupt it back.”

Indeed they can. In July, Samsung SDI, the company’s display subsidiary, announced that next year it will introduce a standard CRT for a 32-inch television screen that is only 14 inches deep, half the depth of existing picture tubes. Televisions with the new “Vixlim” tube, the company promised, will shrink from two feet in depth to 15 inches; they will also have better-quality images than either plasma or liquid-crystal displays and be up to a third cheaper. By the end of 2005, Samsung SDI predicts, the new tubes will be in every large standard television it makes. Standard picture tubes, according to company representative Lee, will enter a “new boom period.”

Asked about the new Samsung CRT, Kim emits a mock groan. “They are very good researchers,” he says. If field emission displays cost three times as much as CRTs and are only somewhat thinner, he acknowledges, nobody will buy them. Still, he believes that by covering its bets, the company as a whole will come out a winner. So will the consumer, who will enjoy steadily falling prices. In Kim’s view, field emission displays will eventually prevail, becoming the leading edge of an approaching wave of nanotechnological products. But the race will be a lot closer than subsequent business histories will make it seem.

TECH SUMMARY

Cathode ray tubes have dominated TV display technology for nearly 70 years, but today they’re locked in a four-way race for the future of home entertainment.

CATHODE RAY TUBES

HOW THEY WORK:

An electron beam steered by magnetic fields strikes phosphors on a glass screen

PROS:

• Reliable
• No burn-in
• Viewable from any angle
• Inexpensive
• Phosphors can display fast motion

CONS:

• The electron gun must sit far behind the screen, making tubes bulky and heavy



LIQUID-CRYSTAL DISPLAYS

HOW THEY WORK:

Polarized light shines through liquid-crystal "gates" that control pixels' color and intensity

PROS:

• Thin
• Light
• Reliable
• No burn-in

CONS:

• The viewer must be positioned directly in front of the screen
• The pixels switch slowly, smearing fast-moving images
• Expensive



PLASMA DISPLAYS

HOW THEY WORK:

An electric pulse sets off a burst of ionized gas in each pixel, as though it were a tiny neon sign

PROS:

• Thin
• Viewable from any angle
• Pixels switch quickly
• Sharp, bright images

CONS:

• High power consumption
• Burn-in (motionless images displayed for too long become seared into the screen)
• Expensive



CNT FIELD EMISSION DISPLAYS

HOW THEY WORK:

Carbon nanotubes glued to a substrate shoot electrons at phosphors on a glass screen

PROS:

• Thin
• Light
• No burn-in
• Viewable from any angle
• Pixels switch quickly
• Low power consumption

CONS:

• Unsolved technical problems, such as maintaining a vacuum between substrate and glass
• Cannot currently be manufactured affordably
 
Interesting stuff. I had heard a few really brief comments earlier in the year about their new half-tube CRT technology, so it's cool to see the technology is ready to go. Non projection CRT with half the tube size basically becomes the industry mid-size trump card, but the large size and high end HDTV market still seems to be without a front runner.

Saying Plasma and LCD will get cheaper is fair, but technology wise they have severe flaws and don't seem to be scalable to full 1080i resolution yet (except through software line tossing).
 

retardboy

Member
So end of 2006? :( I hoped we would get them earlier! Hows about Moto? They gonna come out ealier? Like maybe 2005? I need a new tv and don't want to wait that long.
 

duderon

rollin' in the gutter
What about SEDs Klee? Any new info on that tech?

That's the TV i'm shooting for since Canon is supposed to start selling them in 2005 for $1000, i think it was. They seemed solid in the pros and cons too.
 

hirokazu

Member
nice article.

it'd be interesting to see which tech comes out the winner. and CRT looks to stay around for a long time yet, especially with the few lingering disadvantages of Plasma and LCD displays

on a side note, the train system in Sydney decided to adopt plasma displays for train indicator boards a couple years ago, and because these are pretty much static with scrolling train stops, most of the displays now suffer from severe burn-in. makes you wonder why the government spent so much money on high-end display that can be served with cheap LED displays while at times 0% of trains on the system run on time :/
 
Suikoguy said:
but what about DLP?

Still reasonably supported (Samsung in particular has a really great looking DLP set out now) but it's future could be up in the air as engineers decide whether they can fix the rainbow effect for once and for all or if developing such a solution would incur enough cost to doom the technology in the face of dropping Plasma/LCD/CRT costs.
 

Kleegamefan

K. LEE GAIDEN
Nohwun....one of the things that are so appealing about Carbon Nanotube FEDs is the fact you can use the toolings from exsisting PDP/LCD production lines to create the TVs.....the biggest problem they have facing them is having enough time to solve the development issues...here is a quote:

Luckily for Samsung, production methods for field emission displays are similar enough to those for plasma displays that it can use one of its current fabrication plants to build the devices, avoiding the overhead costs of an expensive new factory

Saying Plasma and LCD will get cheaper is fair, but technology wise they have severe flaws and don't seem to be scalable to full 1080i resolution yet (except through software line tossing).

Yes, I agree with you 100%...proponents of PDP/LCDs claim FEDs will be DOA because PDP/LCD prices are coming down are missing only part of the appeal of FEDs...burn in, refresh rates and power consumption are issues that will continue to plauge the older tech even at lower prices...not to mention the Flat Panel marketplace will be an all out WAR, so expect price wars from all sides involved...


retardboy, Toshiba has a nearly identical TV technology called SED (Surface Conduction Electron Emitter)....these TVs will enter pilot production in August of 2005....Canon and Toshiba have announced the first SEDs will be 50-inch 16:9 panels @ 1080P (not I) resolution...they are basically non-carbon nanotube FEDs, but they have most of positive attributes of true CNT TVs....supurb contrast (8600:1 contrast ratio in just the first gen SEDs!!) bright screens, no screen blur, around 180 degree viewing angles and, best of all, CRT-like shadow detail!!!

I am very bullish on SEDs because Toshiba has thrown down the gauntlet to all flat panel developers (PDP, LCD *and* other FED makers) as they are well along the path of SED manufacturing (already announced production numbers) and this will put the pressure on other CNT FED developers...not the least of which is the sleeping giant (Motorola)...

deadlifter here is some info on SEDs :)

SED consists of a glass plate mounted with electron emitters and with pixels similar in number to those of a CRT electron gun. Positioned next to it is another glass plate coated with a fluorescent substance. Between the two glass plates is a vacuum. The key here is the extremely narrow slit (several nanometers wide) made from ultrafine-particle film. Application of voltage in this narrow slit creates a tunneling effect that causes the emission of electrons. Some of these electrons are accelerated by the voltage applied between the glass plates and collide with the fluorescent-coated glass plate, causing light to be emitted. Since it is a spontaneous light display similar to a CRT, it maintains levels of brightness and color performance, as well as a wide angle of visibility, also on a par with a CRT. Larger screens can also be produced by simply increasing the number of electron emitters in accordance with the required number of pixels. Unlike CRTs, SEDs do not need electronic-beam deflection. As a result, it is now possible to create wall-mounted large-screen TV displays that are only several centimeters thick.

Here are some pix and info on SEDs

IMG]http://www.phileweb.com/news/photo/200409/0SED-MIDORI_big.jpg[/IMG]

sed01.jpg


sed03.jpg


sed04.jpg


sed05.jpg


SED perfomance compared to CRTs, Plasmas and LCDs (note the 8600:1 contrast ratio at the bottom of the slide)
sed07.jpg


IMG]http://www.weblogsinc.com/common/images/3586251161548137.JPG?0.05339619221561154[/IMG]

Suikoguy, I own a Marantz VP12-S1 Front Projector, which has an HD1 DLP chip...even though it is an older DLP product and only 720p, I must games look great on my 144-inch GrayHawk Screen :D
 

Suikoguy

I whinny my fervor lowly, for his length is not as great as those of the Hylian war stallions
Crazymoogle said:
Still reasonably supported (Samsung in particular has a really great looking DLP set out now) but it's future could be up in the air as engineers decide whether they can fix the rainbow effect for once and for all or if developing such a solution would incur enough cost to doom the technology in the face of dropping Plasma/LCD/CRT costs.

Ah yes, the rainbow effect, I thought samsung had worked that out with their new sets. Maybe I misread some info.
 
Suikoguy said:
Ah yes, the rainbow effect, I thought samsung had worked that out with their new sets. Maybe I misread some info.

They've definitely being trying, but most of the improved sets I've seen have been suffering from the same issue as with LCD refresh - there always seems to be a set of eyes that makes the fix still seem broken.

I'll try to find some info about what you're talking about, though. I thought I heard that J-ILA fixed it in most cases, but I haven't seen any followup on that either.
 

retardboy

Member
retardboy, Toshiba has a nearly identical TV technology called SED (Surface Conduction Electron Emitter)....these TVs will enter pilot production in August of 2005....Canon and Toshiba have announced the first SEDs will be 50-inch 16:9 panels @ 1080P (not I) resolution...they are basically non-carbon nanotube FEDs, but they have most of positive attributes of true CNT TVs....supurb contrast (8600:1 contrast ratio in just the first gen SEDs!!) bright screens, no screen blur, around 180 degree viewing angles and, best of all, CRT-like shadow detail!!!

Any idea on the cost? Is it going to be as cheap as NED tvs are supposed to be?
 

sc0la

Unconfirmed Member
Last I heard motorola had ditched its TV partnerships. This was like two weeks ago, I heard it on NPR. =/ maybe I was confused.
 
It always warms your heart to talk about a company worrying a technology might be too good and kill the cash cow divisions of the rest of the company. So much for thinking these are gonna be dirt cheap any time soon:(

KLee: Off-topic, but have you had problems with the Kenwood receiver and Rocket Tykes? I was getting ready to buy these and noticed on the forums that the Kenwood receivers cuts out and resets its circuits for a number of users. Some have wondered whether it's a heat issue (Really wary of this... heat and humidity require decent electronics for me), but most seem to agree something else is at play here. So have you had problems with this set-up? Or do you think there's just a batch of faulty receivers?
 

duderon

rollin' in the gutter
Ristamar said:
The end of 2006?

:(

Yeah, looks like SEDs won't hit full swing until 2007 either :/

Might as well invest in a decent projector right now for 1000 bucks.
 

Kleegamefan

K. LEE GAIDEN
Last I heard motorola had ditched its TV partnerships. This was like two weeks ago, I heard it on NPR. =/ maybe I was confused

Last year, Motorola announced it was going to sell chinese manufactured *LCD* displays in early 2005....I speculated they were doing this to establish themselves as a high-tech flat-panel OEM.....perhaps since then they have found some big CE sugar-daddy like matsushita (wink, wink) who are already an established brand, have a robust distribution stream already in place and who also have existing PDP manufactring plants to license NED technology from Motorola and will build and sell the FEDs themselves??

This is not at all unlike the situation with SEDs as Toshiba basically "bought" the technology from Canon and are now in a joint venture together...

KLee: Off-topic, but have you had problems with the Kenwood receiver and Rocket Tykes? I was getting ready to buy these and noticed on the forums that the Kenwood receivers cuts out and resets its circuits for a number of users. Some have wondered whether it's a heat issue (Really wary of this... heat and humidity require decent electronics for me), but most seem to agree something else is at play here. So have you had problems with this set-up? Or do you think there's just a batch of faulty receivers?

It seems it might be a faulty batch of kenwoods.....I haven't encountered any heat or switching issues with my daughter's system yet (knock on wood)

Yeah, looks like SEDs won't hit full swing until 2007 either :/

Do you see this slide right here:

sed05.jpg


This is a timeline of the SED project....this slide was presented at CEATEC JAPAN 2004 last month and is still current, AFAIK...

That Blue line on top represents the establishment of "a joint venture in October 2004 for the development, production and marketing of next-generation flat-screen SED (Surface-conduction Electron-emitter Display) panels.".....the name of the new venture is called "SED"

The next line down(orange) shows when the new company will begin production in August 2005.

The smaller orange line below the 2nd line shows the number 8, as in august and the numbers 50 and 3K in blue...this means they will produce about 3,000 50-inch or bigger-sized panels per month starting August 2005

Going down we see an orange slope going up with the letters 15K on the bottom and 75K at the top...what this is showing is that volume production of 15,000 panels per month will start in 2007 and at the end of 2007 SED aims to produce about 75,000 panels a month.

Toshiba of america has said that SEDs will be for sale in the US by this time next year, BTW...
 

duderon

rollin' in the gutter
Kleegamefan said:
Do you see this slide right here:

sed05.jpg


This is a timeline of the SED project....this slide was presented at CEATEC JAPAN 2004 last month and is still current, AFAIK...

That Blue line on top represents the establishment of "a joint venture in October 2004 for the development, production and marketing of next-generation flat-screen SED (Surface-conduction Electron-emitter Display) panels.".....the name of the new venture is called "SED"

The next line down(orange) shows when the new company will begin production in August 2005.

The smaller orange line below the 2nd line shows the number 8, as in august and the numbers 50 and 3K in blue...this means they will produce about 3,000 50-inch or bigger-sized panels per month starting August 2005

Going down we see an orange slope going up with the letters 15K on the bottom and 75K at the top...what this is showing is that volume production of 15,000 panels per month will start in 2007 and at the end of 2007 SED aims to produce about 75,000 panels a month.

Toshiba of america has said that SEDs will be for sale in the US by this time next year, BTW...

Right, 3000 panels a month is a minimal amount from what i can understand on the AVS forums and 75,000 isn't exactly enough to keep a good flow to the general populace. I think a figure being thrown around there was 3 million plasmas being released this year. I would expect it to take until late 2006/early 2007 for a good number of reliable SED sets to be released. Please correct me if i'm wrong.
 

Kleegamefan

K. LEE GAIDEN
You are not wrong at all....when you include more specificity in your statements it makes what you are trying to say much more clear:)

Again, Toshiba's SEDs are but one of a slew of FED products due out the next few years:

Toshiba/Canon non-CNT FEDs (SED) debuts in 2005

Motorola CNT FED (NED) 2006-ish

The Sammy CNT FEDs talked about in this article (2006)

Independent CNT FED licensors(cDREAM, Noritake) 2006-ish

NEC, Fujitsu, Sony and Mitsubishi have all gone on record stating they are also developing Nanotube Flat Panels...I think that when you take all of these developing products combined, you will have something that will put a big dent in that 3 mil/per year PDP production number, IMO..

I think we will have some good alternatives to PDPs/LCDs in the next couple of years :D
 
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