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Information About Plasma Displays And A Comparison With Lcd Technology. 23

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Plasma Displays and the comparison with LCD TV?s, which one is the future?

People are quite often of the opinion that Plasma Displays are very much the latest in a series of technologies in use within the Flat Screen TV industry of today whereas in fact it is one of the oldest of the technologies available

To bring it down to its most simplistic form plasma display works effectively by housing many thousands of tiny cells located between two panels of glass which are held in a mixture of inert gasses usually Neon or Xenon.

Depending upon the electrical signal generated and the resulting heat from the reaction with the Phosphors the colour in the cells can vary and this tends to lead to another assumption that in the early days Plasma screens were very much power hungry.

Now this is admittedly a gross over simplification of how Plasma Technology works and may cause the palpitations and increased heart rate if possibly every ?techno geek? known to man but in its very essence this is what it does.

With regards to the actual technology itself Plasma technology is probably one of the older forms of technology used for televisions and flat screen TVs in particular since it’s been around since 1964 when it was first ?conceived? for want of a better description at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne.

Screen sizes for plasma displays vary and have increased somewhat since the humble 21 inch displays launched in 1992 and now you can get plasma displays in a variety of sizes and you can now find commercial displays available in excess of 103 inches in screen size.

LCD TV?s have certainly closed the technological gap that had hitherto existed between the two technologies and all of the previously strong areas that Plasma had dominated over the years are no longer really applicable at the present stage in time.

Nowadays you’ll find that the low electrical power consumption of LCD TV?s the lower actual weight and falling prices have actually made LCD TV?s much more competitive with regards to Plasma Screens.

From 2006 onwards industry analysts noted that effectively LCD TV?s were overtaking plasma displays particularly in the large 40inch plus market where basically plasma previously enjoyed a massive dominance since the inception of technology. One of the other areas of consolidation within the Industry has seen the Plasma manufacturing base very much consolidate with now over 50 brands being manufactured by only 5 companies ? this of course has led to economies of scale hitherto imagined where the technology of more and more screens can be shared and further help cut the overall cost base.

Over the years it has been felt that some of the technological aspects of Plasma technology leant it self more to the higher end of screen performances (such as greater brightness control, screen resolution etc) however this is now changing. Whereas LCD was very much seen as a cross between the poorer relation and junior technology of the two, now things have changed and LCD is seen as being very much the technology of the future.

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The Hitachi 26LD200 LCD Flat Screen TV, For The Price It Will Take Something Special To Beat This.

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

The Hitachi 26LD200 LCD Flat Screen TV, For The Price It Will Take Something Special To Beat This.

Viewing television nowadays is certainly different from the humble experience it was in the early years under John Logie Baird to the vast array of images now viewable on the amazing Liquid Crystal Display /Flat Screen TV sets of today. The many benefits that most people derive from TV have made it indispensable in their lives.

Highly complicated yet when reduced to its basics quite frighteningly simple in execution the process of the television broadcast is one that very few people actually understand entirely or do they? The term television may refer at one point specifically to a television set yet also at the same time be used as a term to refer to the medium of television broadcasting itself.

Understandably if you were to ask the average man in the street his biggest issue with television today most would reply that the one problem they have is an increasing dependency on technological terms and an increasing ignorance of what these terms actually mean.

Rather than continue with a basic history of the industry, it might be best to stop and take a look at the latest developments within the industry mainly that of digital television, what digital television actually means, its formats, bandwidth and the technical terminology and jargon used today.

So how would you describe Digital TV? Digital television is a telecommunications system for broadcasting and receiving moving pictures and sound by means of digital signals in contrast to the more established analogue systems which is effectively the transmission of signals used by analogue (traditional) TV.

How does Digital TV differ from an analogue one? Using one of the newer LCD TV?s available will help us actually go through what all of this terminology actually means.

The LCD TV that we shall use for our illustrative purposes here is the Hitachi 26LD200 LCD Flat Screen TV.

The following items of information have to be understood before you can make a proper valued judgement regarding your new Digital TV?

The Screen resolution of the TV is possibly the most obvious place to start. Here we refer to the exact number of pixels that can be displayed in each dimension.

Whether the TV is Hi-Definition Ready would be the next thing to look at. By Hi Definition Ready we mean that is the TV is ready and suitable to take advantage of the latest Hi Definition TV pictures that more and more programmes are being broadcast in.

The next item that we would need to look at is what types of connectors are used between the peripherals used alongside the main Digital TV?

We are referring here to the exact nature and number of the Scarts Sockets and Plugs in use. Here the definition of SCART refers to ?Syndicat francais des Constructeurs d?Appareils Radio et Television (SCART).

Lastly on the technical side we would need to look at what types and what numbers of High-Definition Multimedia Interfaces (HDMI) are being used. The High Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) is a licensable audio/video connector interface for transmitting uncompressed digital streams between digital audio/video sources such as set-top box, HD DVD Player etc.

The 32LD9700 is a 32in LCD TV and these TV’s at present can be found in the region of 1000 pounds sterling or 2000 US dollars. The resolution of the screen is 1366 X 768 and with regards to being HD Ready the answer is yes. The Hitachi has 3 (2 RGB) scarts and the type and number of Multimedia interfaces the 32LD9700 uses is HDMI and 2. The type of Tuner for this TV is Analogue and Digital and the Hitachi is available from a wide variety of outlets.

So how would we rate the Hitachi 32LD9700?

First up, we would look at the picture quality and our score here would be 10, and closely tied in to the picture quality is the sound quality and our score for this would be 10. Another useful aspect to review is the availability and number of relevant connections and our score here would be 8. If we take a look at the overall “featureability” our score would be 10 and for ease of use and overall value for money we would give it, 10 and 10 respectively.

Finally our overall opinion would be WOW what can you say but that this is one of those TV’s that excel in almost every thing it is supposed to do. Described as a “Superb All-rounder”, there is not much that this TV does not achieve. If you can get your hands on one of these then go for it.

With regards to the prices in this article we have tried in all cases to take an average across the industry from a number of well known web sites and so we ask you to bear this in mind and treat these prices as advisory only rather than absolutes.

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Vivadi Saturn Simply The Best

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

With Christmas heading towards us at a ?rapid rate of knots? ? so to speak, most of us tend to review how well the TV or DVD Players so as not to miss out on all of the TV Films. The aim of this article is to help you make your mind up if you are interested in buying a Vivadi Saturn HD50.

Purchasing a new TV today is an important decision. The idea of parting with what could be a couple of hundred notes does tend to concentrate the mind somewhat.

Given the speed and rapidity of technological advances nowadays think carefully about whatever purchase you make and try and ensure within reason the future compatibility of your TV with industry standards.

The latest telecommunication system for broadcasting moving pictures and sound is known as Digital television (DTT) and as the name implies this relies upon the transmission and reception of digital signals as opposed to the more conventional analogue formats. There are a number of different ways to receive digital television. One of the oldest means of receiving DTV (and TV in general) is using an antenna (known as an aerial in some countries).

For the purposes of this article we want to take a look at purchasing a new Flat Screen TV and in this case the television in question is the Vivadi Saturn HD50.

The Saturn HD50 is a 50in Flat Screen Plasma TV and currently these TV’s can be found for 8000 pounds sterling or 16000 US dollars. The resolution of the screen is 1366 X 768 and with regards to being HD Ready the answer is yes. The Vivadi has 1 (no RGB) scarts and the type and number of Multimedia interfaces the Saturn HD50 uses is HDMI and 2. The type of Tuner for this TV is Analogue and Digital and the Vivadi is available from limited outlets only.

Are LCD Flat Screen TV’s the future?

All these points being taken into consideration, how would we view the Vivadi Saturn HD50?

First up, we would look at the picture quality and our score here would be 10 out of 10, and for the sound quality we would rate it at 10 out of 10. Taking a look at the number of relevant connections and their availability, our score would be 10 out of 10. With regards to the overall level of features, our view would be 10 out of 10 and for ease of use and overall value for money we would give it, 8 out of 10 and 6 out of 10 respectively.

Finally our overall opinion would be when you look at the scores we gave it you get a fairly good picture of what our team felt when they reviewed. This may sound slightly stupid and very obvious but now and then you can give a TV a good score on a technical basis but not really

B And O Beovision 7 40 Is This One Of The Best Flat Screen Tv’s Out There

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

With the Festive Season approaching it is one of the busiest times of the year, especially regarding the TV, and DVD Industry as we all try and make sure that we don?t miss the latest TV Films. The following article is to help some of you who might be interested in buying a B and O Beovision 7-40 make up your mind.

Getting a new television for the home is a major purchase nowadays. If you are going to spend what could be considered a small fortune or at the very least a large amount of money then it would be prudent to try and make the correct decision at the outset.

Ensuring that any purchase you make is to all intent and purposes future-proof has to be the most major of all criteria when deciding which is the Best Flat Screen TV to buy.

Digital television (DTT) is a telecommunication system for broadcasting and receiving moving pictures and sound by means of digital signals, in contrast to analogue signals used by analogue (traditional) TV. Introduced in the late 1990s, this technology appealed to the television broadcasting business and consumer electronics industries as offering new financial opportunities.

The purpose of this article is to conduct a brief Flat Screen TV Review look at what is on offer with the new generation of Flat Screen TV’s available and in this case the television in particular is the B and O Beovision 7-40.

The Beovision 7-40 is a 40in LCD Flat Screen TV and the prices for these are around 7470 pounds sterling or 15000 US dollars so it is not really a Cheap Flat Screen TV. The screen resolution is 1366 X 768 and with regards to being HD Ready the answer is yes. The Beovision has 3 (3 RGB) scarts and the type and number of Multimedia interfaces the Beovision 7-40 uses is DVI and 1. The type of Tuner for this TV is Analogue and Digital and the Beovision is available from specialised outlets only.

So how would we rate the B and O Beovision 7-40?

Well to start with our score for the picture quality is 10 out of 10, and for the sound quality we would rate it at 10 out of 10. With regards to the availability and number of relevant connections, our score would be 8 out of 10. If we take a look at the overall feature-ability; our score would be 8 out of 10 if we then take a look at the ease of use and overall value for money then our scores would be, 6 out of 10 and 6 out of 10 respectively.

The overall verdict would be the performance of this TV it has to be said is pretty fantastic but a similar performance can be had for a fraction of the price and therefore giving much greater value for money if you know where to look elsewhere.

It is extremely unlikely given the variety and range of makes and models available that you will not be able to find something to match your tastes or budget.

The important thing to remember here is that with regards to the B and O Beovision 7-40, this is only our opinion and an independent view and does not imply an official endorsement of the B and O Beovision 7-40 either way, good or bad.

Please be aware that the prices quoted in this article are taken from a number of leading e-commerce websites and as such should be taken as guides and indications of prices rather than absolute quotes.

Och Ziff In Massive Ipo Plans

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

In one of the largest financial exercise of its kind, Och-Ziff Capital Management Group at last revealed their plans for an IPO

Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC on Monday filed an initial public offering with the Securities and Exchange Commission to sell up to $2 billion in Class A shares.

Och-Ziff, of New York, is an institutional alternative asset-management firm and one of the largest of its kind with approximately $26.8 billion of assets under management for over 700 fund investors as of April 30. Details about the number of shares offered and estimated price range for the IPO weren’t disclosed in the filing.

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Och-Ziff was listed as the seventh-largest U.S. hedge fund management firm, according to trade publication Absolute Return.

Och-Ziff said it plans to use net proceeds from the IPO to acquire interests in its business from its existing owners, including members of senior management. Its existing partners will reinvest all of their after-tax proceeds in the company’s funds, the filing said.

Goldman, Sachs

Us Sub Prime Panic Causing Global Jitters

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

The recent Bull Market in Stock Markets around the world had a brief wake up call last week lead by US Markets heading south in a big fashion on Friday. The Dow Jones lost more than 100 points on Firday alone to close at 13,360.

As reported last week, one of the major causes of this attack of the jitters was the the gradual realisation that the US may be in for another Hedge Fund collapse. This time there are two funds involved, both managed by Bear Stearns and it looks as if a $3.2 billion rescue package may be only enough to save just one of them and the other may be thrown to the wolves - so to speak. The root problem in all of this is the growing perception that the US sub prime market in Housing may be behind the downfall. Bad bets on this market appears to be causing casualties across the board with some institutions taking bigger hits than others.

Trying to hope that it might just sort itself out and go away doesn’t appear to gathering much ground amongst seasoned observers.

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So what exactly is the problem - and could this be the start of something bigger?

Two of Bear Stearns’ hedge funds - the High-Grade Structured Credit Fund and the High-Grade Structured Credit Enhanced Leverage Fund - are experiencing problems. In essence, the funds made some bad bets on the US housing market that appear to have backfired on them and now they are causing problems. Other lenders have now had a crisis of confidence and are asking for monies back and the Hedge Fundsdon’t have the cash - hence the panic.

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The troubles emerged when Bear Stearns stopped investors in the second fund (the ‘enhanced leverage’ one) from pulling money out - which is, as Bloomberg put it, “the first sign of an impending collapse.” So naturally, “the investment banks who had lent money to the Bear Stearns hedge funds said – ‘We want our money back. And if we can’t get our money back right away, we may seize collateral and sell it,’” said Janet Tavakoli of Tavakoli Structured Finance.

Campaign To Help Increase The Taxes On The Super Rich Gains Momentum

Sunday, June 24th, 2007

The Campaign to increase the taxes paid by the Super-Rich and Wealthy Hedge Fund and Private Equity Managers got some serious backing and a massive boost on Friday with the endorsement of leading Congressional Democrats on Friday
Charles Rangel, House Ways and Means Chairman and Barney Frank, Financial Services Chairman joined a dozen lawmakers co-sponsoring legislation that would require managers of certain private partnerships to pay ordinary income-tax rates of as much as 35% on “carried interest” — a cut of profits they receive — which currently is taxed at the 15% long-term capital-gains rate.

More info: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118255424973845346.html?mod=home_whats_news_us

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$3.2 Billion Rescue Package Prevents Largest Hedge Fund Collapse For Years

Saturday, June 23rd, 2007

Up to $3.2 billion in loans yesterday was pledged by the investment bank Bear Stearns Companies to help prevent the imminent collapse of on of the Hedge Funds it managed.

The potential crisis came about through apparent poor lending decisions and bad bets on sub prime mortgages.

This would appear to have been the biggest rescue of a Hedge Fund since a consortium of lenders provided $3.6 billion to help stave off the collapse of Long Term Capital Management in 1998.

This problem arose basically because of a deteriorating housing market in the United States and a mixture of poor decisions brought about through bad management and greed.

Dow Jones Board Takes Over Talks On Future Of Company

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

Dow Jones Board Takes Over Talks on Future of Company
By SARAH ELLISON

Dow Jones

Google Keeps Tweaking Its Search Engine

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Google Keeps Tweaking Its Search Engine
By SAUL HANSELL

THESE days, Google seems to be doing everything, everywhere. It takes pictures of your house from outer space, copies rare Sanskrit books in India, charms its way onto Madison Avenue, picks fights with Hollywood and tries to undercut Microsoft’s software dominance.

But at its core, Google remains a search engine. And its search pages, blue hyperlinks set against a bland, white background, have made it the most visited, most profitable and arguably the most powerful company on the Internet. Google is the homework helper, navigator and yellow pages for half a billion users, able to find the most improbable needles in the world’s largest haystack of information in just the blink of an eye.

Yet however easy it is to wax poetic about the modern-day miracle of Google, the site is also among the world’s biggest teases. Millions of times a day, users click away from Google, disappointed that they couldn’t find the hotel, the recipe or the background of that hot guy. Google often finds what users want, but it doesn’t always.

That’s why Amit Singhal and hundreds of other Google engineers are constantly tweaking the company’s search engine in an elusive quest to close the gap between often and always.

Mr. Singhal is the master of what Google calls its “ranking algorithm” — the formulas that decide which Web pages best answer each user’s question. It is a crucial part of Google’s inner sanctum, a department called “search quality” that the company treats like a state secret. Google rarely allows outsiders to visit the unit, and it has been cautious about allowing Mr. Singhal to speak with the news media about the magical, mathematical brew inside the millions of black boxes that power its search engine.

Google values Mr. Singhal and his team so highly for the most basic of competitive reasons. It believes that its ability to decrease the number of times it leaves searchers disappointed is crucial to fending off ever fiercer attacks from the likes of Yahoo and Microsoft and preserving the tidy advertising gold mine that search represents.

“The fundamental value created by Google is the ranking,” says John Battelle, the chief executive of Federated Media, a blog ad network, and author of “The Search,” a book about Google.

Online stores, he notes, find that a quarter to a half of their visitors, and most of their new customers, come from search engines. And media sites are discovering that many people are ignoring their home pages — where ad rates are typically highest — and using Google to jump to the specific pages they want.

“Google has become the lifeblood of the Internet,” Mr. Battelle says. “You have to be in it.”

Users, of course, don’t see the science and the artistry that makes Google’s black boxes hum, but the search-quality team makes about a half-dozen major and minor changes a week to the vast nest of mathematical formulas that power the search engine.

These formulas have grown better at reading the minds of users to interpret a very short query. Are the users looking for a job, a purchase or a fact? The formulas can tell that people who type “apples” are likely to be thinking about fruit, while those who type “Apple” are mulling computers or iPods. They can even compensate for vaguely worded queries or outright mistakes.

“Search over the last few years has moved from ‘Give me what I typed’ to ‘Give me what I want,’ ” says Mr. Singhal, a 39-year-old native of India who joined Google in 2000 and is now a Google Fellow, the designation the company reserves for its elite engineers.

Google recently allowed a reporter from The New York Times to spend a day with Mr. Singhal and others in the search-quality team, observing some internal meetings and talking to several top engineers. There were many questions that Google wouldn’t answer. But the engineers still explained more than they ever have before in the news media about how their search system works.

As Google constantly fine-tunes its search engine, one challenge it faces is sheer scale. It is now the most popular Web site in the world, offering its services in 112 languages, indexing tens of billons of Web pages and handling hundreds of millions of queries a day.

Even more daunting, many of those pages are shams created by hucksters trying to lure Web surfers to their sites filled with ads, pornography or financial scams. At the same time, users have come to expect that Google can sift through all that data and find what they are seeking, with just a few words as clues.

“Expectations are higher now,” said Udi Manber, who oversees Google’s entire search-quality group. “When search first started, if you searched for something and you found it, it was a miracle. Now, if you don’t get exactly what you want in the first three results, something is wrong.”

Google’s approach to search reflects its unconventional management practices. It has hundreds of engineers, including leading experts in search lured from academia, loosely organized and working on projects that interest them. But when it comes to the search engine — which has many thousands of interlocking equations — it has to double-check the engineers’ independent work with objective, quantitative rigor to ensure that new formulas don’t do more harm than good.

As always, tweaking and quality control involve a balancing act. “You make a change, and it affects some queries positively and others negatively,” Mr. Manber says. “You can’t only launch things that are 100 percent positive.”

THE epicenter of Google’s frantic quest for perfect links is Building 43 in the heart of the company’s headquarters here, known as the Googleplex. In a nod to the space-travel fascination of Larry Page, the Google co-founder, a full-scale replica of SpaceShipOne, the first privately financed spacecraft, dominates the building’s lobby. The spaceship is also a tangible reminder that despite its pedestrian uses — finding the dry cleaner’s address or checking out a prospective boyfriend — what Google does is akin to rocket science.

At the top of a bright chartreuse staircase in Building 43 is the office that Mr. Singhal shares with three other top engineers. It is littered with plastic light sabers, foam swords and Nerf guns. A big white board near Mr. Singhal’s desk is scrawled with graphs, queries and bits of multicolored mathematical algorithms. Complaints from users about searches gone awry are also scrawled on the board.

Any of Google’s 10,000 employees can use its “Buganizer” system to report a search problem, and about 100 times a day they do — listing Mr. Singhal as the person responsible to squash them.

“Someone brings a query that is broken to Amit, and he treasures it and cherishes it and tries to figure out how to fix the algorithm,” says Matt Cutts, one of Mr. Singhal’s officemates and the head of Google’s efforts to fight Web spam, the term for advertising-filled pages that somehow keep maneuvering to the top of search listings.

Some complaints involve simple flaws that need to be fixed right away. Recently, a search for “French Revolution” returned too many sites about the recent French presidential election campaign — in which candidates opined on various policy revolutions — rather than the ouster of King Louis XVI. A search-engine tweak gave more weight to pages with phrases like “French Revolution” rather than pages that simply had both words.

At other times, complaints highlight more complex problems. In 2005, Bill Brougher, a Google product manager, complained that typing the phrase “teak patio Palo Alto” didn’t return a local store called the Teak Patio.

So Mr. Singhal fired up one of Google’s prized and closely guarded internal programs, called Debug, which shows how its computers evaluate each query and each Web page. He discovered that Theteakpatio.com did not show up because Google’s formulas were not giving enough importance to links from other sites about Palo Alto.

It was also a clue to a bigger problem. Finding local businesses is important to users, but Google often has to rely on only a handful of sites for clues about which businesses are best. Within two months of Mr. Brougher’s complaint, Mr. Singhal’s group had written a new mathematical formula to handle queries for hometown shops.

But Mr. Singhal often doesn’t rush to fix everything he hears about, because each change can affect the rankings of many sites. “You can’t just react on the first complaint,” he says. “You let things simmer.”

So he monitors complaints on his white board, prioritizing them if they keep coming back. For much of the second half of last year, one of the recurring items was “freshness.”

Freshness, which describes how many recently created or changed pages are included in a search result, is at the center of a constant debate in search: Is it better to provide new information or to display pages that have stood the test of time and are more likely to be of higher quality? Until now, Google has preferred pages old enough to attract others to link to them.

But last year, Mr. Singhal started to worry that Google’s balance was off. When the company introduced its new stock quotation service, a search for “Google Finance” couldn’t find it. After monitoring similar problems, he assembled a team of three engineers to figure out what to do about them.

Earlier this spring, he brought his squad’s findings to Mr. Manber’s weekly gathering of top search-quality engineers who review major projects. At the meeting, a dozen people sat around a large table, another dozen sprawled on red couches, and two more beamed in from New York via video conference, their images projected on a large screen. Most were men, and many were tapping away on laptops. One of the New Yorkers munched on cake.

Mr. Singhal introduced the freshness problem, explaining that simply changing formulas to display more new pages results in lower-quality searches much of the time. He then unveiled his team’s solution: a mathematical model that tries to determine when users want new information and when they don’t. (And yes, like all Google initiatives, it had a name: QDF, for “query deserves freshness.”)

Mr. Manber’s group questioned QDF’s formula and how it could be deployed. At the end of the meeting, Mr. Singhal said he expected to begin testing it on Google users in one of the company’s data centers within two weeks. An engineer wondered whether that was too ambitious.

“What do you take us for, slackers?” Mr. Singhal responded with a rebellious smile.

THE QDF solution revolves around determining whether a topic is “hot.” If news sites or blog posts are actively writing about a topic, the model figures that it is one for which users are more likely to want current information. The model also examines Google’s own stream of billions of search queries, which Mr. Singhal believes is an even better monitor of global enthusiasm about a particular subject.

As an example, he points out what happens when cities suffer power failures. “When there is a blackout in New York, the first articles appear in 15 minutes; we get queries in two seconds,” he says.

Mr. Singhal says he tested QDF for a simple application: deciding whether to include a few news headlines among regular results when people do searches for topics with high QDF scores. Although Google already has a different system for including headlines on some search pages, QDF offered more sophisticated results, putting the headlines at the top of the page for some queries, and putting them in the middle or at the bottom for others.

GOOGLE’S breakneck pace contrasts with the more leisurely style of the universities and corporate research labs from which many of its leaders hail. Google recruited Mr. Singhal from AT