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The story behind "Plasma TV" In our modern times
Posted by admin | Posted in 1080p Full HD Articles | Posted on 16-06-2010
Plasma TV may seem an invention for a new brand, but his incredible story actually goes back several decades ago. During the 1960s, professors at the University of Illinois, as with conventional TVs as computer monitors. This has its drawbacks, and Professor Donald Bitzer began studying the possibility of a plasma display. In July 1964, Bitzer, colleagues at the University of Illinois professor and graduate student Robert Willson Gene Slottow created plasma beforeMonitor. This was just a prototype, with a single plasma cell.
Plasma TVs and millions of plasma cells and true plasma televisions were still waiting to be, but the work of Bitzer, Slottow and Wilson was the first step. His work has attracted the notice of television networks began to study the feasibility of replacing the use of plasma TV on the cathode ray tube televisions difficult time. But just like the plasma television studio to begininteresting, have shifted their focus to LCD televisions. LCD projection allows manufacturers to create, finally, flat TV screens, and this development has brought progress of the plasma TV to a virtual standstill for decades. For many years, all military contracts have been held, that the concerns of the plasma display all. In the early 1980s, Larry Weber, Globe and Stephen James Kehoe co-founder of Plasmaco Company, and began 1990 as the plasma display technology has finally arrivedin their own. In 1992, Fujitsu introduced the full-color plasma display first. Plasmaco In 1994, paired with the Panasonic Corporation, and several manufacturers have produced a large scale, full-color plasma televisions for home use.
Today, plasma TVs are very popular, although it will continue to face strong competition from LCD TVs, and the environmental impact of plasma TVs is quite controversial. The use of plasma televisions, andcontributes to global warming. Plasma screen TV to use more energy than LCD and plasma TVs currently use the greenhouse gas nitrogen trifluoride, which contributes to global warming.






