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Ofcom should hold off auctioning spectrum freed by digital TV switchover until it is sure its proposed technology upgrade will work, according to this reprot from Trade magazine ERT weekly.
If it doesn’t, industry fears Freeview will be crippled as other platforms roll-out HD channels with which the digital terrestrial TV service will not have the spectrum space to compete. For more click the link below.
Ofcom plans put Freeview HD at risk

Hitachi will change the shape of flat panel television when it introduces the its first Ultra Thin 35mm deep LCD TVs into the UK this spring. The Japanese giant says UT LCD is a new type of display is designed for a highly affluent and refined segment of consumers who seek luxury, style and prestige. Initially offered in three sizes (32inch , 37inch and 42inch), the displays include a variety of cutting edge technology.
The thinness of the displays was achieved through Hitachi’s proprietary implementation of a technology called EEFL, which affords greater power efficiency, delivers better and more flexible color accuracy and delivers a longer overall life span for the display.
The screen’s also have In Plane Switching (IPS), for a super-wide viewing angle. A vertical and horizontal viewing angle of 178 degrees maintains natural colors and brightness, making it ideal for watching TV with the whole family and friends. The larger models also incorporate anti-judder technology. All Hollywood movies flash 24 individual images each second. However, Hollywood’s 24 frames-per-second movie-making techniques do not match worldwide television systems, which show 50 (Europe) and 60 (US and Japan) frames each second.
When standard frame rate conversion is done, the viewer can often observe a jerky, troublesome visual effect that is called “judder.” It appears as if the image is jittery or stuttering and is especially noticeable when the picture pans or makes sweeping, side-to-side movements. In its new Ultra Thin line, Hitachi has implemented proprietary technology which accurately and automatically eliminates the jerky “judder” motion. It does so by creating interpolated frames based on the original film images. It smoothes out the movement and correctly matches the motion of the original movie.
For more details click here.

Samsung, the first company to introduce a stand-alone Blu-ray player, has shown its first fourth generation machine, the FHD BD-P1500. Positioned as an ideal player for anyone who enjoys Blu-ray, DVDs or CDs in their home, this modfel can also upconvert standard DVDs to 720p, 1080i and 1080p resolutions. The BD-P1500 sports an HDMI 1.3 port with CEC for expanded color delivery and easy home systemcontrol. With abuilt-in Ethernet connection, itn can take advantage of BD Live interactivity and download the latest firmware upgrades and more with just a click of a button.
True audiophiles will love the BD-P1500 as it goes beyond standard Dolby Digital and Dolby Digital Plus audio playback to include 7.1 PCM, Dolby TrueHD, DTS-HD High Resolution and Master Audio, Bitstream audio output via HDMI and more-making for a truly immersive viewing experience for movies, gaming, sports and more. The BD-P1500 will begin shipping June 2008.

For more details click here.

Samsung has taken a bold new design look to its upcoming LCD TV ranges. Not only is picture quality dramatically enhanced, but a new design born from Samsung’s extensive research and development in the automotive and fashion industries brings a never-before-seen ‘Touch of Color’ to any living room or home theater.
The so-called Touch Of color series 6 models offer a hint of amber color blended into Samsung’s traditional piano black bezel frame.“With the application of TOC design to the Series 6 and 7 HDTVs, Samsung is truly changing the look of TVs and introduces a visual appeal that will make it the centerpiece of any living room,” said Jonas Tanenbaum, vice president of Flat Panel Marketing at Samsung Electronics America.
“Featuring multifunctional connectivity, the Series 6 and 7 deliver an experience that goes well beyond traditional content viewing. Users can now connect and utilize the data stored on a variety of digital devices, turning their HDTV into a media hub. It is a whole new way of seeing and using HDTVs.”
For more details click here.

Panasonic will launch its first BD Live player, the DMP-BD50. Described as the ultimate playback source for high definition 1080p content, the machine will launch in Europe later this year. Blu-ray media offers a wide range of functions that foster the transition to HD - including 1080p image quality, lossless Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio and versatile Picture-in-Picture applications.
The BD50 BD-Live function ‘opens up a myriad of interactive possibilities for the consumer,’ says the company. In the future BD-Live will allow users to connect the DMP-BD50 to the internet to download such data as images and subtitles, and to join in multi-player interactive games that are linked to bonus movie content contained on Blu-ray discs.For optimum image quality the DMP-BD50 features the PHL Reference Chroma processor and P4HD i/p conversion processor, which combine to create Uniphier, a precise digital video processor that produces sharp, crisp, natural colors that are extremely faithful to the original movie. Uniphier reflects the advance encoding and authoring technologies developed by Panasonic Hollywood Laboratory.
It will be joined in Europe by the cheaper DMP-BD30, the UK’s first profile 1.1 Blue-ray player. The company will announce its pricing plans at a European press conference in Valencia, Spain in a matter of weeks. For more details click here.

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