Aussie Government to ban fat-panel TVs

An interesting article that boosts SED TV and OLED TV for energy consumption reasons alone. Good reading at the link above, especially the headline!

Thursday, 11 October 2007, 6:15 PM WITH AN EYE ON melting Antarctica, the Australian government is proposing regulations that would ban most plasma and LCD HDTVs by the year 2011.

After commissioning a report that found the popularity of high power-drawing TVs like plasma and LCD TVs is growing. The bigger and brighter screens get, the more power is required, and Australia is trying to crack down on energy consumption. This is the government that was looking into banning incandescent bulbs in favor of fluorescent bulbs earlier this year.

By 2011, plasma and LCD TVs could be replaced with less energy consuming technologies like SED TV and OLED TV. But for now, the planet heats up because of our TVs.

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With SED TV going nowhere at the moment, Canon and Nano-Proprietary have lost once again. Sony announced a few minutes ago that the Sony OLED TV will be released December 1, 2007. It’s only an 11″ model, but it’s the first OLED TV and the first real challenge to Plasma and LCD TV to be available to the consumer. Another sad day for SED TV fans. Press release below:
TOKYO (Reuters) – Sony Corp said on Monday it would launch an ultra-thin flat TV based on the organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology on December 1, bringing a new contender to a market dominated by LCD and plasma TVs.

It will be the world’s first OLED TV, the company said.

Sony, the world’s second-largest liquid crystal display TV maker behind Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, expects an 11-inch OLED TV with a thickness of 3 mm to sell for 200,000 yen ($1,700).

OLED panels are said to be energy efficient, make thin and light displays, offer crisp pictures and have strength in showing fast-moving images, suitable for watching sports events and action movies.

But manufacturers still face some technological challenges in making larger panels and driving down production costs to compete commercially with LCD and plasma TVs, analysts say.

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Many new full HD models have been introduced at IFA 2007 in Berlin.Sharp in particular has introduced a potential challenger to SED TV.  The one inch thick, Sharp LCD TV is available in both 42 and 50 inches and states a contrast ratio of 100,000:1

Full specs and pricing aren’t available at this time. Check back for more information as it’s released. If the price is anywhere close to reasonable, this could throw another wrench into the SED works.

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I came across an very interesting paper titled “Technical comparison between SED and FED”

It covers in great detail the similarities and differences between SED TV and FED TV

and was presented by Richard Fink of Applied Nanotech Inc., at Asia Display 2007.

This is a must read for SED TV fans. The paper is reprinted here:

Technical comparison between SED and FED

Permission for
Reprint, courtesy Society for Information Display

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Note: a reader has commented that this story is from 2006. Sorry if I raised any expectations of SED TV production this year.

Toshiba is still mentioning SED TV in a recent story from www.arnnet.com

I’m pretty confident we won’t see any SED televisions from Toshiba at all this year.

Toshiba plans to end sales of CRT (cathode ray tube) and analog-tuner equipped LCD (liquid crystal display) televisions in Japan from April this year, it said Tuesday.

The company will instead concentrate its efforts on rebranding and promoting its digital LCD televisions, said Satoshi Niikura, executive vice president of Toshiba’s digital media network company, at a Tokyo news conference. The digital TV market is growing fast in Japan after the launch of terrestrial digital TV broadcasting in late 2004.

Overall LCD TV sales were 4.4 million units last year and surpassed sales of CRT sets for the first time. For this year Toshiba anticipates LCD TV sales will grow to 6 million units, and further to 7 million units in 2007. In contrast, the CRT TV market is seen contracting from 3.5 million sets in 2005 to 900,000 sets in 2007. The company expects to sell 650,000 PDP (plasma display panel) TV sets in 2007.

The year is unlikely to see any significant sales of SED (surface-conduction electron-emitter display) panel sets, Niikura said. Toshiba and Canon Inc. have been developing the technology for some time and have a joint production line in the Tokyo suburbs but commercial products are yet to be seen. Toshiba had originally promised SED televisions last year and is currently targeting them in small volumes during the “spring” of this year but a decision on whether the technology is ready for use in a commercial product is yet to be made.

Following the lead of several of its largest competitors, Toshiba plans to unify branding of its flat-panel television sets worldwide under a single name, the company also announced.

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Not much going on in the SED TV world lately. We can only hope that Nano Proprietary and Canon are doing some negotiating.

Summer is here, so if there is nothing earthshattering in the SED TV field, this blog may be quiet for a while. Hope everyone out there has a great summer.

P.S. Keep your fingers crossed…

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Tokyo – Toshiba Corporation announced that the company will postpone the start of sales of SED TVs, which was originally planned for the fourth quarter of 2007.

The decision is based on information provided by Canon Inc., indicating that Canon will not be able to provide SED panels to the original schedule.

The specific timeframe for the launch of SED TVs cannot be indicated at this moment.

Let’s hope this isn’t the last we hear from Toshiba on SED television. Smarthouse reports that this may be the end of SED TV. I really wouldn’t be surprised, the way Canon has dealt with this whole fiasco.  Keep your fingers crossed SED TV fans.

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I think we all knew this was coming …
TOKYO (Reuters) – Canon Inc. and Toshiba Corp. have decided to postpone the launch of SED TVs for the second time, the Japanese companies said on Friday, raising doubt over the commercial viability of the new flat televisions.

The two companies, which already delayed the debut of the SED TVs once last year, are now postponing the launch from the final quarter of 2007 to an unspecified later date.

Canon, the world’s top makers of digital cameras, copiers and laser printers, cited a prolonged patent lawsuit with Nano-Proprietary Inc. as a reason for the delay.

It is also putting off the launch to develop the technology to cut production costs, a step necessary to compete with liquid crystal display (LCD) and plasma TVs.

Toshiba, which plans to procure SED panels from Canon, is postponing the TV launch as Canon is unable to start supplying the panels on time.

The new launch timing has yet to be decided, they said.

Full story at link above.

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Here’s what we were expecting from Canon. I’m still not sure how going down this road will help them get SED TVs in Japanese stores by the end of this year.

Canon Inc. has announced it filed an appeal on May 15, 2007, for its ongoing patent litigation with Nano-Proprietary, Inc. concerning SED panel technologies. Canon appealed against the verdict in the first hearing ruled by the US District Court for the State of Texas on May 4, 2007.

In the first hearing, the Court ruled Canon had breached the SED panel patent license agreement and therefore Nano-Proprietary has a right to terminate the agreement. Canon has been licensed patents owned by Nano-Proprietary. However, since Canon formed a joint company “SED Inc.” with Toshiba Corp. in 2004, Nano-Proprietary has been in dispute with Canon, claiming for “a cancellation of the current licensing agreement.”

From Tech-On! Japan

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Last week, during an official media tour to Canon‘s Japanese headquarters, Canon Chairman/CEO Fujio Mitarai confirmed that Canon will launch SED TV technology this year SED TV

Full story at Smarthouse News.com

(registration required)

However, the mention of the status of SED display technology caused a bit of unease for Canon President & COO Tsuneji Uchida who still arrogantly claims that Canon has done nothing wrong. On May 3, Nano-Proprietary won a lawsuit seeking to void a licensing agreement between -Proprietary and Canon. “We greatly respect the intellectual property rights of others,” Uchida said, “as well as our own.” (more…)

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