panasonic lcd monitors made in china
12.1 inch 1280x800 Matte LED LP121WX4-TLA1 for Panasonic CF-C1 Screen Replacement Item : 12.1 inch for panasonic cf-c1 led screen Part Number: LP121WX4-TLA1 LP121WX4 (TL)(A1) Resolution: 1280(RGB) x 800 WXGA Screen Type: Liquid Crystal Display with TFT Active Matrix with WLED Backlight Surface: Matte TN display Quality: New, Original and Grade A,widescreen Package: Antistatic bag and Original box Warranty: 3 months,depend on quantity Payment Terms: T/T, Western Union Delivery: HK/ Shenzhen * 3 months warranty * Antistatic bag and original box * 30/20pcs/ctn, plastic bag/pc with bubble and paperboard . * Box size depends on items weight * Delivery will be arranged within 72hours once received payment * Use third parties delivery services or delivered as clients request. * DHL(fast & safety, just 2-4 working days) * EMS (safety & favorable, need 5-10 working days ) * UPS & FEDEX (fast & expensive) Jessie Wang Shenzhen Guanweida Electronics Technology Co.Ltd.
Flat-panel displays are thin panels of glass or plastic used for electronically displaying text, images, or video. Liquid crystal displays (LCD), OLED (organic light emitting diode) and microLED displays are not quite the same; since LCD uses a liquid crystal that reacts to an electric current blocking light or allowing it to pass through the panel, whereas OLED/microLED displays consist of electroluminescent organic/inorganic materials that generate light when a current is passed through the material. LCD, OLED and microLED displays are driven using LTPS, IGZO, LTPO, and A-Si TFT transistor technologies as their backplane using ITO to supply current to the transistors and in turn to the liquid crystal or electroluminescent material. Segment and passive OLED and LCD displays do not use a backplane but use indium tin oxide (ITO), a transparent conductive material, to pass current to the electroluminescent material or liquid crystal. In LCDs, there is an even layer of liquid crystal throughout the panel whereas an OLED display has the electroluminescent material only where it is meant to light up. OLEDs, LCDs and microLEDs can be made flexible and transparent, but LCDs require a backlight because they cannot emit light on their own like OLEDs and microLEDs.
Liquid-crystal display (or LCD) is a thin, flat panel used for electronically displaying information such as text, images, and moving pictures. They are usually made of glass but they can also be made out of plastic. Some manufacturers make transparent LCD panels and special sequential color segment LCDs that have higher than usual refresh rates and an RGB backlight. The backlight is synchronized with the display so that the colors will show up as needed. The list of LCD manufacturers:
Organic light emitting diode (or OLED displays) is a thin, flat panel made of glass or plastic used for electronically displaying information such as text, images, and moving pictures. OLED panels can also take the shape of a light panel, where red, green and blue light emitting materials are stacked to create a white light panel. OLED displays can also be made transparent and/or flexible and these transparent panels are available on the market and are widely used in smartphones with under-display optical fingerprint sensors. LCD and OLED displays are available in different shapes, the most prominent of which is a circular display, which is used in smartwatches. The list of OLED display manufacturers:
LCDs are made in a glass substrate. For OLED, the substrate can also be plastic. The size of the substrates are specified in generations, with each generation using a larger substrate. For example, a 4th generation substrate is larger in size than a 3rd generation substrate. A larger substrate allows for more panels to be cut from a single substrate, or for larger panels to be made, akin to increasing wafer sizes in the semiconductor industry.
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OSAKA -- Panasonic will stop producing LCD monitors for medical equipment by 2021, bringing an end to the display business for a company that once ranked among the world"s top television makers.
OSAKA -- Panasonic is poised to outsource production of televisions to Chinese rival TCL, the world"s third-largest TV maker, in the Japanese electronics group"s latest move to cut costs in a segment where its brand has faded, Nikkei has learned.
Panasonic Corp. said Thursday it will withdraw from all production of liquid crystal display panels by 2021 amid fierce competition from Chinese, South Korean and other foreign rivals.
Panasonic “determined that continuation of the business would be unviable, faced with a tougher environment in the global market, so the decision was made to stop production,” the company said in a statement.
Panasonic Corp. said Thursday it will withdraw from all production of liquid crystal display panels by 2021 amid fierce competition from Chinese, South Korean and other foreign rivals.
"Panasonic determined that continuation of the business would be unviable, faced with a tougher environment in the global market, so the decision was made to stop production," Panasonic said in a statement.
It will conduct consultations with employees of Panasonic Liquid Crystal Display Co. in Himeji in Hyogo Prefecture, western Japan, the Osaka-headquartered parent"s sole LCD producer, to ensure jobs, aiming to transfer and relocate them within its group.
A model for Japan"s electric giant Panasonic introduces its new lineup of plasma and LCD TVs in Tokyo. Panasonic said Friday it will boost its plasma panel production in Shanghai to meet growing demand for flatscreen televisions in China.
Japanese electronics giant Panasonic said Friday it will boost its plasma panel production in Shanghai to meet growing demand for flatscreen televisions in China.
The Chinese unit, Panasonic Plasma Display (Shanghai) Ltd (PPDS), produces 25,000 42-inch panels a month and will start up a new plant in April 2012 with a monthly capacity for 120,000 42-inch panels, Panasonic said.
Panasonic also said in a press release that it will move plasma panel production equipment from its plant in Amagasaki, western Japan, to help expand the Shanghai unit.
The expansion of PPDS will give Panasonic "a stronger structure to meet the growing demand in China" and enable the firm to "improve the group-wide cost competitiveness" in the global flatscreen TV market, the statement said.
Over the past two decades we"ve seen an explosion of growth in the market for liquid crystal displays, but this growth has also led to its maturation. Companies have scaled up and merged, new firms have brought down costs and production technology has continued to advance, resulting in a cut-throat market for LCDs that offers negligible profit margins. So as we often see in these cases, another competitor is getting ready to bow out: Panasonic is announcing that it will exit production of LCDs by 2021.
This has been a long time in the marking for Panasonic; the company once used to be a leading maker of televisions, but because of intense competition from Chinese and South Korean manufacturers, previously ceased making LCD TVs in 2016. Instead, in recent years the company has focused on production of LCDs for industrial and automotive applications in order to find a more profitable niche of the LCD market. But it looks like even specialization did not produce the kind of returns required by Panasonic, and as a result they are exiting the LCD market altogether. It is interesting to note, however, that they aren"t leaving the displays market entirely; the company will continue offering OLED televisions.
Panasonic Liquid Crystal Display Co. — the IPS LCD plant in Himeji, Hyogo Prefecture — was established in 2010 and absorbed all of Panasonic’s LCD assets in 2014. According to Nikkei, Panasonic plans to repurpose the factory to produce automotive batteries and keep all of its 500 employees. Workers who will not be needed at the new facility will be relocated to other facilities that belong to Panasonic and/or will get labor management consultations.
Panasonic announced today that it"s closing down its plasma TV assembly plant in Shanghai, China – the latest stage in the reduction of its plasma display capacity in the face of a market increasingly dominated by LCD TVs.
The Shanghai plant hasn"t been operating since last September, and its closure reflects a market oversupplied with plasma TV manufacturing, and the failure of the technology to sell in large quantities in China, which Panasonic saw as a major growth market.
And the TV product mix is changing: two years ago Panasonic sold 7.5m plasma TVs in a year, representing almost 40% of its TV sales, but this year it expects to sell just a third as many, and for LCD-based TVs to account for 84% of all sales.
The company says it isn"t abandoning plasma: it still makes display panels in Japan, and sets are assembled at several plants worldwide. And that includes China: some of the capacity of the Shanghai plant will transferred to an existing LCD TV factory in Jinan, Shandong Province.
Panasonic’s shares rose on the news.#Panasonic to withdraw from LCD TV panel production – The Mainichi https://t.co/qjQW50jHSV#Japan— The Mainichi (@themainichi) May 31, 2016
If one LCD is good, two is better, right? I"m not talking about two layer LCD. No, that"s still not quite right. LCDs have lots of layers. How about Double Stuf LCD? Nailed it.
Double Stuf LCDs have the potential to improve the contrast ratio of a display with minimal additional power draw and without needing additional LEDs, like
The problem, and what has always been LCD"s problem, is this method doesn"t block all the light. There"s no such thing as a "black" LCD pixel. Some light always leaks through, which is why LCDs have always had worse black levels and contrast compared to other technologies, like
If only there was a way to make the liquid crystal layer work better. Or, baring that, adding more liquid crystals or something. Well, that"s what the Panasonic MegaCon promise: A way to improve how well the TV manipulates the light, after it"s created by the LEDs.
In Hisense"s prototypes and the current version of this TV (currently only available in China), the second layer was 1080p on a 4K display. Hisense promises that when this tech reaches US shores, both layers will be 4K. This means that essentially it"s an LCD TV with a 8 million zone backlight, far more than even mini-LED has. With two 4K modules, each pixel gets a far greater ability to block the light from the backlight, greatly improving this longstanding LCD issue and improving the contrast ratio.
Price-wise, Hisense is aiming to be cheaper than OLED, though probably similar-to or more than higher-end LCDs. For reference the HZ65U9E, its 65-inch model for sale in China now, is 17,999 yuan, which converts to about $2,500, £2,000, or AU$3,700.
There"s no price or other info, but given its chunky looks it"s either very early in the prototype stage, or more likely, aimed for post-production and broadcast TV markets. It"s worth noting that Panasonic no longer sells TVs in the US.
Manufacturers have a lot of money in LCD, and that"s not changing any time soon. They"re always looking out for the next big thing, which is how we got OLED and how we"ll be getting MicroLED. Before we get to the next gen, there"s still a lot of improvement to be made with the current gen. Mini-LED is one aspect of that, and potentially so is dual-LCD. No doubt we"ll hear more about both at CES in January.
As for TCL themselves, they make fantastic TVs in the Americas but their European models have been hampered by poorer specs and Android TV. Even so, it"s hard to justify buying Panasonic when the likes of TCL are now selling similar spec TVs at a fraction of the price. Looks like TCL may bring some higher end TVs to Europe this year. Panasonic should have done exactly what TCL did in the Americas and partnered with Roku instead of Mozilla.
Panasonic Liquid Crystal Display (PLD) announced a plan to terminate LCD panel production by the end of 2021 and hold an auction of the production equipment in its 8.5th-generation (8.5G) plant located in Himeji, Hyogo Prefecture of Japan. The equipment comprises approximately 1,000 pieces of production machinery, with the number of auction items totaling 9,000, including apparatuses that can be used by non-semiconductor and non-LCD panel manufacturers.
As reported by Japanese media, PLD has added equipment of front-end process to the auction, including machines of color filter production, mid- and small-size panel assembly, module packaging, and analysis and testing, as well as cleanrooms. The 8.5G production line of PLD’s Himeji plant can produce 40,000–50,000 panels per month; the said equipment was initially used to manufacture LCD panels and then turned to produce advanced medical LCDs in 2016.
Amid fierce competition in the market, PLD outsourced the production of mid- and low-end TVs to TCL, the third largest TV manufacturer in China, so as to lower its business cost. Additionally, Panasonic Group has considered merging or downsizing its production bases in Japan and abroad; in the present fiscal year, for example, the company’s plants in India and Vietnam will suspend TV production.
News has revealed that Panasonic used to be a giant LCD business and has been one of the top Japanese companies with more than 100 years of history (others include Sony, Toshiba, and SHARP). However, facing changes in the display industry with increasing popularity of large-size panels and ultra-HD monitors, this ex-leader has been slow in transformation and stuck to the original LCD production. Consequently, the corporation continues to witness a decline in profits and is under huge pressure. Regarding the present auction plan, Panasonic officially revealed that because of fierce competition and changes in the entire market, the company has decided to stop LCD production despite its intention to invest in new product development.
Sony Corp"s and Panasonic Corp"s ambitions for higher earnings this year depend on convincing Yin Weiguang, a retired construction worker in Beijing, that he chose the wrong television.
Sony and Panasonic, the world"s two largest makers of consumer electronics, are slashing some TV prices by a third in China after being outsold 6-to-1 by Shenzhen-based Skyworth. Sony aims to double TV shipments in China this fiscal year, and Panasonic expects 50 percent growth in the world"s second- largest market for flat-panel TVs.
Panasonic, the world"s biggest maker of plasma TVs, may cut prices of some models in China as much as 50 percent this year, Hitoshi Otsuki, senior managing director of the Osaka-based company"s overseas operations, said in an interview last week.
Sales of liquid-crystal-display (LCD) TVs in China will rise 15 percent to 45.5 million next year and overtake North America shipments, according to DisplaySearch estimates. China will become the biggest flat-panel TV market, including plasma sets, in 2012, according to the Austin, Texas-based researcher.