victornba
09-03-2005, 11:29
Pessoal, li hoje um artigo bem interessante no Tom's Hardware comparando a tecnologia Plasma e a LCD. Aborda uma série de aspectos técnicos, práticos e de mercado. Abaixo copio a conclusão deles.
http://graphics.tomshardware.com/display/20050309/index.html
Abraços e boa leitura!
Victor
Conclusion
This article has tried to explain the operation of plasma and LCD video display technologies, and highlight the qualities and shortcomings associated with each technology. While it's not a good idea to compare apples and oranges, plasma seems to have the upper hand in terms of absolute quality. Still, the future seems to be turning towards LCD - the market for LCD TVs is poised to explode, and a boisterous crowd of hawkers are all offering LCD TV displays, some of which are good, some not so good, and some just plain shoddy. Confirmation of this trend, which started less than six months ago, is in the number of manufacturers from the computer industry who have gotten on the LCD TV bandwagon. But a TV set is not a computer monitor, and that's something manufacturers will have to contend with.
Which technology will win out? That choice may not be up to us. Manufacturers clearly prefer LCD because of the similarity to semiconductor fabrication techniques, which most of them already have well under control.
http://graphics.tomshardware.com/display/20050309/index.html
Abraços e boa leitura!
Victor
Conclusion
This article has tried to explain the operation of plasma and LCD video display technologies, and highlight the qualities and shortcomings associated with each technology. While it's not a good idea to compare apples and oranges, plasma seems to have the upper hand in terms of absolute quality. Still, the future seems to be turning towards LCD - the market for LCD TVs is poised to explode, and a boisterous crowd of hawkers are all offering LCD TV displays, some of which are good, some not so good, and some just plain shoddy. Confirmation of this trend, which started less than six months ago, is in the number of manufacturers from the computer industry who have gotten on the LCD TV bandwagon. But a TV set is not a computer monitor, and that's something manufacturers will have to contend with.
Which technology will win out? That choice may not be up to us. Manufacturers clearly prefer LCD because of the similarity to semiconductor fabrication techniques, which most of them already have well under control.