Umm, ya Patrick, it's entirely debatable. The SXRDs produce fantastic black level, color accuracy, etc, that most LCDs can't touch. Not to mention that they don't have the annoying "motion blur feature" of LCD sets. The only area that these TVs suffer in is a slight reduction in viewing angle and not being as super bright as an LCD set. Another advantage of these TVs is that in 3-4 years when the bulb goes out you put in a new one and essentially have a new TV. When your LCD or Plasma burns down to 1/2 brightness you get to throw it in the trash and buy a new one.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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Umm, ya Patrick, it's entirely debatable. The SXRDs produce fantastic black level, color accuracy, etc, that most LCDs can't touch. Not to mention that they don't have the annoying "motion blur feature" of LCD sets. The only area that these TVs suffer in is a slight reduction in viewing angle and not being as super bright as an LCD set. Another advantage of these TVs is that in 3-4 years when the bulb goes out you put in a new one and essentially have a new TV. When your LCD or Plasma burns down to 1/2 brightness you get to throw it in the trash and buy a new one.