Get the Picture by Understanding Plasma HDTV
Are you bored watching the same old programs and movies? The problem may not be what you’re watching on television, but the very television you’re watching. With plasma HDTV, it’s like you’re watching television for the very first time.
The television industry has evolved at an alarming rate over the past fifty years. Television sets have morphed from small screens with rabbit-ear antennas, to wall-sized flat screens. The media has grown as well, taking North American viewers from three main networks to countless satellite programming choices.
Buying a television used to be as simple as choosing from a few models at the local department store. Today, viewers are faced with many factors in choosing a new set. There are analog and digital sets. Some are HDTV ready while others are simply HDTV enabled. Screens can be plasma or LCD, true flat or virtual flat. The decision can be so overwhelming that it’s necessary to educate yourself about the basic elements present in modern day television sets.
Analog
Analog is the type of television signal that has been used over the past fifty years. Using this technology, television signals were sent and received in basic analog format. While analog televisions are the least expensive to buy and can provide decent quality, there are several drawbacks. The most prominent disadvantage to using the analog format is that the television signals are able to accommodate a limited amount of data for the screen and sound. The analog signals are also easily, and often immediately, corrupted. Even still, analog systems are still the basis of the television industry, and the service will be available for years to come. So don’t worry if you have an analog set. You’ll still be able to use it, long after other formats dominate the market.
Digital
Digital TV signals allow television stations to send date that is much more dense, and includes more definition. There is also less degradation of signal. This increased level of density creates a much better quality sound and picture, particularly through DVDs.
High Definition Television (HDTV)
Thanks to traditional digital television, new standards of high definition programming are becoming more readily available. Television stations can now provide customers with the highest level of audio and video quality by transmitting HDTV, or high definition television. With HDTV, your set can receive and process these specialized signals and display them on a high definition-enabled screen. When all of these elements are combined, the visual and sound results are simply stunning.
Digital television and HDTV are commonplace in today’s industry, but you won’t be able to appreciate the pristine levels of sound and picture on your old television set. We are in the midst of a digital video revolution, thanks to recent advancements like DTV, DVD-Video, HDTV, digital satellite broadcasts and computer video. One giant leap forward in modern television technology is plasma display technology.
Plasma television screens first entered the US market in 1999, but the concept was initially developed at the University of Illinois in July 1964. These first plasma displays were no more than points of light formed in laboratory experiments, but it was this infantile technology that brought about wondrous technologies. The plasma technology quickly evolved, and by the late 1960s it had grown to the point where scientists were able to show geometric shapes. Three decades and a great deal of advancement later, science has combined high speed digital processing, materials and advanced manufacturing technology to create the full-color plasma display screens that are widely available today.
The development of plasma televisions has made technological leaps and bounds ahead of other television technologies. In fact, plasma televisions are now the fastest-selling ‘new’ television technology on the market. Compared to conventional televisions, plasma screens provide a higher resolution, and many new plasma televisions are capable of displaying HDTV signals. In addition to superior picture quality, plasma televisions are easily mounted to the wall for a theatre quality viewing experience.
With a world of programming choices and mind blowing new technologies like HDTV signals displayed on plasma screens, your television experience need never be boring again.
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