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In that case I think you'll be particularly horrified by the standard technology expected to replace CRT plasma and LCD.
It's a flatscreen based on nanotubing that uses an LCD style sandwich system combined with CRT style technology (mini electron guns through the use of nano tubing, which fire across the tiny sandwich layer to LCD like panel layers at the front which fluoress like the phosphor on a CRT.
Thus all the advantage sof CRT and LCD at half the thickness of LCD's and plasmas, faster reaction rates than CRT's, sharper images than LCD's, lower power consumption than LCD's lower weight, cheaper per inch of display, and theoretically the size is only limited by the amount of resources you are willing to expend on each unit, asell as even light distribution.
It's a flatscreen based on nanotubing that uses an LCD style sandwich system combined with CRT style technology (mini electron guns through the use of nano tubing, which fire across the tiny sandwich layer to LCD like panel layers at the front which fluoress like the phosphor on a CRT.
Thus all the advantage sof CRT and LCD at half the thickness of LCD's and plasmas, faster reaction rates than CRT's, sharper images than LCD's, lower power consumption than LCD's lower weight, cheaper per inch of display, and theoretically the size is only limited by the amount of resources you are willing to expend on each unit, asell as even light distribution.
Ahh, sweet. I was wondering when they'd start making plasma displays.Alantai Firestar wrote:In that case I think you'll be particularly horrified by the standard technology expected to replace CRT plasma and LCD.
It's a flatscreen based on nanotubing that uses an LCD style sandwich system combined with CRT style technology (mini electron guns through the use of nano tubing, which fire across the tiny sandwich layer to LCD like panel layers at the front which fluoress like the phosphor on a CRT.
Thus all the advantage sof CRT and LCD at half the thickness of LCD's and plasmas, faster reaction rates than CRT's, sharper images than LCD's, lower power consumption than LCD's lower weight, cheaper per inch of display, and theoretically the size is only limited by the amount of resources you are willing to expend on each unit, asell as even light distribution.
- SwiftSpear
- Classic Community Lead
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- Joined: 12 Aug 2005, 09:29
Ew, pentium XE.aGorm wrote:Next year Q 2 i think they said.
Goona maybe go dule core two... if i have the cash... and atleast 2 gig of DDR2. Ill start with a geforce 7800 GT and tehn by a secong latter on when i need to.
aGorm
BTW, check out some DDR2 benchmarks, they are a HUGE dissapointment. The technonoly is really unpolished and the search time is acctually far worse then DDR ram. AMD refuses to support DDR2 until it can achive the next level clock speed, which will allow it to preform up to spec with the current DDR chips. DDR3 is projected for release late next year, it should fill the gap that DDR2 was supposed to, but failed miserably.
Maybe it was DDR 3 then... I know Nvidia are ment to be releasing new bords for AMD that have one of them on them, and its apparntly in Q2 (last thing I herd...)
aGorm
Well, if the 8 series is out by Q2 ill be getting one of them obviosly...By that time, GF 7800 will be old news. Probably a budget card ^_^
I havn't mentinond scummy peniums anywere...Ew, pentium XE.
aGorm
- SwiftSpear
- Classic Community Lead
- Posts: 7287
- Joined: 12 Aug 2005, 09:29
Like I say, AMD doesn't support DDR2. I'm planning on building around summer next year, and that is one of the things that made me "WTF?"...aGorm wrote:Maybe it was DDR 3 then... I know Nvidia are ment to be releasing new bords for AMD that have one of them on them, and its apparntly in Q2 (last thing I herd...)
Well, if the 8 series is out by Q2 ill be getting one of them obviosly...By that time, GF 7800 will be old news. Probably a budget card ^_^
I havn't mentinond scummy peniums anywere...Ew, pentium XE.
aGorm
DDR2 benchmarks are terrible, they have been a terrible dissapointment. All the technology has ever done is trick suckers who didn't know better... DDR3 I don't think will be mainstream until early 2007... You may be able to buy it mid-late 2006, but it probably won't be supported by many mobos for a while afterwards.
I'll take a look at that mobo you said Nvidea was pushing... but I fear that they may not be offering AMD compatability with thier features.
OK, not were i read about it first, but to prove that it is coming...
http://www.nordichardware.com/news,2142.html
aGorm
http://www.nordichardware.com/news,2142.html
aGorm