killer, but not everyone thinks it's the next big thing in flat screen technology.
Four major TV manufacturers - Fujitsu, Pioneer, Samsung and investments in plasma and LCD.
we consider plasma to be a superior technology.
Over many decades General.
One of the companies behind much of laser TV's hype is Arasor, techniques that are key to laser TV technology.
Exchange today, but the listing has been postponed until 11:30am next Wednesday for procedural reasons, said an Arasor spokesman.
TV manufacturer Mitsubishi to create working laser TV prototypes, which it showed off to a group of journalists last week.
"With a laser you're able to custom engineer the light source, so you're able to get the deepest red, the deepest blue and the deepest green," said Marshall, adding that this "gives you almost year in January, there'll be eight different manufacturers, including the major ones, with laser TVs on display", but this did not gel with what a number of large TV manufacturers have said.
In fact, the consensus seems to be that laser TV as a technology is too new to be labelled a plasma or LCD killer, at least in the near future.
into our product range," said Michael Broadhurst, Pioneer's public relations manager.
hype, today's display market is already fiercely competitive and television."
competing, next generation formats.
At this stage, it is too early commercial production", he added.
TV.
Australia has for their TV development in the near future, and we flat TVs, nor change our planning for future models," said Matthew Moran, general manager, Philips Consumer Electronics Australia.
Securities and Investments Commission in June.
Marshall.
industry, so they end up going to the US or Europe to work in the industry there.
presence of those people, and turn the brain drain around."
Arasor also has bases set up in China and India, but Marshall plants.
Sydney.
We've got the first phases of that going. Anything that all we'll do in China is put it in a box," said Marshall.
around for some time, but earlier versions were too bulky to be integrated into a consumer product.
accomplished.
"[The] colour [enhancement] was sort of an unexpected bonus," said Marshall.
But regardless of the supposed benefits, Pioneer's Broadhurst says he'll believe it when he sees it.
CES, as promised," he said.
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