postheadericon HDTV and Consumer Electronics – An Explanation of How Plasma TV’s Work

Plasma TV display technology is not only smart. It also clearly represents high-tech in its truest and finest form for video display as a rule. Televisions for the past seventy-five years came from the same technology that involves using cathode ray tubes. With CRT TV, a beam of negative-charged particles called electrons fires up inside of a huge glass tube.

The electrons then affect the phosphor atoms that are all along the screen. These phosphor atoms start to light up in response. A television image appears as the result of lighting up certain areas of this phosphor solution with different colors at varied intensities. This is so very unlike plasma TV display.

Its creator was Donald L. Bitzer, H. Gene Slottow, and Robert Wilson. The plasma display was part of the PLATO Computer System whose displays were somewhat popular in the early 1970s. However, because CRT displays were a lot more affordable than these models were then, sales started to gradually slip and go down in the latter part of the 1970s.

Plasma TV display has a very basic idea and that is to light up little fluorescent lights that produce a TV image. Flat panel TV technology contains three fluorescent lights that make up each individual pixel. These pixels each possess a red, green, and blue light that constitute the fluorescent lights of the TV screen.

The long and short of it, a quality plasma television cannot be matched by any other type of televisions in the industry. Just think about it. This type of TV has over 16 million colors on a standard screen. No kidding, to me that has to be magic. You can keep reading books and magazines, but what it boils down to is what’s different. I feel with all those colors boredom will become extinct. Probably not, but a guy can dream.

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