There is no warm and fuzzy about current display trechnology. It would be better if the gov would stay out of it and let the marketplace do its thing. This includes requlations on what must or must not be a part of every monitor. The other mess is display manufactures bowing to the studios whims for DRM. Stop this and consumers will come running.
Crystal Ball

Where is flat-screen technology headed?
I have a first-generation Pioneer Kuro in my bedroom and a Sony SXRD rear-pro in my den. Sony has discontinued SXRD technology, and I can't tell where Pioneer is headed with the Kuro now that it has outsourced production. I would like to replace the Sony with a flat panelit's picture quality is actually pretty good, but having such a bulky item between my speakers degrades the sound of my stereo. But lately, I'm feeling a little snake-bit from spending good money on televisions only to wonder a year or two after the purchase whether I'll still be able to buy parts in five years.
So for now, I'm on the sidelines, wondering when the next big jump in picture quality will occur, what it will be, and just as importantly, what the length of its product life cycle will be. What do you foresee?
Ah, the perennial questionbuy now or wait for the Next Big Thing? I'm with you in my curiosity about Pioneer's Kuro sets now that Panasonic is going to be making the glass. What I saw of Panasonic's new "Neo PDP" plasma panel at CES was quite impressive, and I'm guessing it will be the technology used in the next-gen Kuros. If so, they should look great, but it's all conjecture at this point. I'll have to wait to see an actual set before I can say for sure. I suspect that will be sometime next year.
Another observation from CES is that flat-panel picture quality saw incremental improvementand reduced thicknessbut nothing truly revolutionary. Sure, there were OLED TVs at the Sony and Samsung booths, but those are years away from being viable large-screen TVs, and even more years before they are anything approaching affordable.
Meanwhile, Pioneer Kuros get very close to true blackthat is, 0 foot-lambertsand local-dimming LCD sets actually achieve it, so how much better than they get? The color gamuts of these TVs are very close to correct, and most other measures of their picture quality are equally good, so any improvement in the near term is going to be marginal.
The only area I see any possibility for dramatic improvement is resolution. People are starting to talk about 4K displaysthat is, roughly 4096x2301but such displays are bound to be ultra-expensive. Also, there is no commercially available content at that resolution, and there isn't likely to be for several years at least. Thus, I don't think it's something to wait for at this point.
As for product life cycles, they've been getting shorter and shorter over time. That's just the nature of the industry, so my best advice is to get the best display you can afford now and enjoy it as long as you can. It's not going to change just because something better comes alongit will still perform just as well as the day you bought it for years to come. The only thing that will change is your attitude toward it, and that's something over which you have complete control.
If you have an audio/video question for me, please send it to scott.wilkinson@sorc.com.
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"But lately, I'm feeling a little snake-bit from spending good money on televisions only to wonder a year or two after the purchase whether I'll still be able to buy parts in five years." I believe tech companies are required to stock an adequate number of parts for repairs with anything they sell for a number of years after a product is discontinued. The only thing you really need to worry about is when a company goes out of business...

Mr. Wilkinson, Thanks for answering my question. I purchased both my Sony SXRD and my Pioneer Kuro based on reviews in UAV and have been pleased with those purchase decisions - other than my worries about the parts issue - so I have confidence in the information this web site provides. Sounds like we should expect evolution and not revolution for awhile. You state "The only thing that will change is your attitude toward (the display), and that's something over which you have complete control." That's not quite correct. I find Mrs. Spencer is very effective at changing my attitude if she decides that large rear-projection television does not really fit in her den anymore. (lol) Mr. Robertson, I did not know about the legal requirement manufacturers have to stock parts on discontinued models. Do you know how many years the manufacturer is required to carry parts from the date of discontinuing a product?

There is no federal law about parts and only a few states have such a statute: http://www.nesda.com/consumers/parts.html Nothing is said in the laws about the price of the parts.
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