I4U has taken the time playing PS3 on the Viewsonic 42-inch N4261W LCD HDTV and are very impressed.
The Viewsonic 42-inch N4261W LCD HDTV uses a 42-inch TFT active matrix LCD panel with a 1920 x 1080 screen resolution. The contrast ratio is 1500:1 and viewing angles are 176-degrees vertically and horizontally. Brightness is listed at 500 nits and the aspect ratio is 16:9.
Inputs include a pair of HDMI ports, TV/cable, composite, component, and S-Video jacks. Audio options include a 3.5mm mini stereo in/out and RCA left/right audio in. the HDMI ports support HDCP protected content as well. The built-in speakers are 2 x 10 watt units with TruSurround XT sound.
The native resolution for PC use is 1360×768 but 1024 x 768, 1280 x 768, 12080 x 1024, and 1280 x 720 are possible as well. If you connect your Pc via a DVI to HDMI cable you can do full 1080p as well. TV resolutions available are 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, and 1080p. The Viewsonic 42-inch N4261W LCD HDTV measures in at 42.1 x 29.9 x 5.3 inches and weighs 83.8 pounds with the stand.
Full Review: I4U

I4U takes a closer look at the Toshiba Regza 42×3000P 42 inch monitor and thinks it gives you a great bang for your buck starting with the tablestand to the great design to the excellent HD image quality display.
Performance highlights of the Toshiba Regza 42X3000P (similar to 42X3030D but without digital TV Tuner) include 6.000:1 contrast ratio, 500 cd/m2 brightness, 8 msec response time, active backlight control, PIXEL PROcessing III PRO, 3D color management and Cross Color Noise Suppression.
When connecting the Sony PS3 and using 1080p output the Toshiba Regza 42X3000P shows what it really is made for. The HD image is stunning and very crisp. Game footage looks sharp and clear.
Full Review: I4U
Fujitsu is the king of the hill with their 231 inch display; but with a resolution of 512×288, it is hardly a resolution winner.
And at a price of $500,000 you might as well purchase your own theatre but that would not have the coolness factor of a 231 inch frickin’ LCD screen.
Source: Gizmodo
LCD specialist not conceding small device market to widely prognosticated OLED future
Just as the LCD quickly replaced bulky and heavy picture tubes in portable electronics, for years analysts and other trend-watchers have been projecting that organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology would make quick work of LCDs. In theory, volume production of OLED could be considerably cheaper than LCD and enable ultra-low power and even flexible screens to become a part of the mainstream.
Source: ITPro
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