To say plasma is dead because the 5th largest manufacturer pulls the plug on building their own panels is silly! ...
No one doubted the quality of Pioneer's Plasmas, the problem is its hard to sell a TV that costs twice as much as its competitors. ... PRICE
I am glad that someone here finally said what was begging to be said.
When I saw the email in my inbox, from Gene, and saw the subject line, i.e., plasma is dead, I could not help but open the mail. When I did, it was immediately apparent that I had been misled. The actual information was about Pioneer having made a strategic business decision to stop manufacturing their own plasma panels and to procure them from Panasonic instead. What sense does it make to infer from this information, that plasma is dead? It makes no sense at all. Plasma may be losing sales rapidly to LCD panels for all I know, but for it to make sense to infer the imminent demise of plasma, you would have to look at sales trends, and while the decision by Pioneer may have somthing to do with sales trends, their was no such information given in the article.
So it was a little annoying, and then when I decided to read the forum posts, all I saw for the first several pages were a lot of people who had taken what they were told at face value, without questioning the obvious problem with it, and then jumping into a debate which was wrought with a lot of misinformation.
Why did it take almost three full pages of posts before someone pointed this out? One person even stated, in effect, that you can't get an LCD panel larger than 48". What complete nonsense. At least one person made statements regarding the hysteresis of LCD, i.e., the motion blur or jerkiness. These problems are historically correct, but not any more. My new 52" Sony XBR has zero motion artifacts. There is no blur at all, and with the 120 Hz screen refresh rate, there are no motion artifacts.
As for black levels and contrast ratio, I don't doubt that it is marginally inferior to the best plasma panels that are available today, but during the daytime or at night when the room lighting is on, the black bands at the sides when watching 4:3 content appear every bit as black as the black frame that covers over the speakers on the sides. At night with the lights all turned off, you can tell that the black is not completely black, but it is hardly noticeable at all when looking at the picture. I have a critical eye when it comes to television, and I was fully aware that there is a detectable difference in the depth of the black levels, with the best of the plasma sets having a slight advantage. But all the information that I have says that efficiency and/or sensitivity of the plama cells diminishes over time, i.e., that the more an individual cell is used, the less light it produces for a given applied voltage or power. That is all I need to know, to know that screen burn-in of plasma is necessarily a real effect. Everything that I have read says that this effect is very real, and yet at least one person here claims that it is not real. If this effect is not real, why would the manufacturers make a fuss over that pixel-shifting stuff, which, by the way, would be the last thing that I could imagine wanting in a TV. If this effect is not real, why don't they give a five-year warranty against screen burn-in?