We recently featured an entertaining project here, a digital clock with a variety of different retro display technologies forming its numerals. Among those was an extremely unusual device, a ...
To paraphrase “Where have all the flowers gone,” where have all the rear projection TVs gone? And it begs the question, “Is the demise of the rear projection TV on the horizon? Its been an interesting ...
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Sony has announced that it is dropping its money-losing rear-projection TV business worldwide to ...
TOKYO--Sony said on Thursday it would stop making rear-projection televisions, becoming the latest company to distance itself from a technology once seen as a promising rival of LCD and plasma ...
Try as we might to suck all the goodness out of CES 2006, there was simply too much great stuff to digest. So, back on UK soil and with interview notes dredged from the depths of our suitcase, we can ...
PITTSBURGH ― New camping concepts and camper models will be on the roads and in campgrounds as the weather warms this year. Will you be driving one of them? The Pittsburgh RV Show, underway through ...
What I am wondering is if in addition to the way a rear-projection screen usually works, is it possible to also use it as a front projection screen with decent results? Let's say that I have a large ...
LONDON — Optical components group Bookham, Inc will demonstrate at two trade exhibitions next week a novel LED multiplexing device targeted at rear projection television and pocket projectors. Dubbed ...
With the ever-falling prices of flat panel LCD and plasma displays, it was only a matter of time before the rear projection television died a tragic death. Since 2007, their sales in the market under ...
Owning a honking rear projection TV is an ever-increasing WASP social stigma, that is, unless it’s so freaking huge that neighbors admire it with the same jealous-of-waste gleam in their eye as your ...
An unorthodox start-up is betting that consumers want to pay less money for big televisions, even if they're not flat panels. MicroDisplay, a Fremont, Calif.-based company, will begin manufacturing a ...
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