My son sent me a link to a news item the other day, about a 43" curved LCD monitor from NEC. The news item was dated early June of 2009. The monitor was priced at a "sensible" $7,999.
Given the date of the item, I thought "Hmm, I wonder what they sell for now.", and proceeded to google around for prices. Oddly enough, I could not find a single news item that was dated any more recently than first week iof June 2009.
Did this fully-immersive monitor-of-your-dreams simply vanish? My guess is yes. Notwithstanding the silly price that tends to deter purchase by intermittently-employed gamers living in their parents' basement, the unit seemed to have contravened every principle that permitted LCD to ascend as monitor of choice.
Can you hang it from a wall? No. Does it have a nice shallow profile that lets you slide it back to create more desk-space? No. Does it have amazing resolution? No (native resolution is only 900 pixels high). Is it easy and cheap to ship? No. Can you fit it on the desk in your dorm room? Dream on.
So how the heck did it actually come to be a product? Beats the hell out of me. Maybe a half-dozen execs in Japan have one, but apart from people who would have 2000 sq ft zen-garden offices on the 40th floor, I can't imagine the potential market to have justified its development.
Or am I missing something?
Given the date of the item, I thought "Hmm, I wonder what they sell for now.", and proceeded to google around for prices. Oddly enough, I could not find a single news item that was dated any more recently than first week iof June 2009.
Did this fully-immersive monitor-of-your-dreams simply vanish? My guess is yes. Notwithstanding the silly price that tends to deter purchase by intermittently-employed gamers living in their parents' basement, the unit seemed to have contravened every principle that permitted LCD to ascend as monitor of choice.
Can you hang it from a wall? No. Does it have a nice shallow profile that lets you slide it back to create more desk-space? No. Does it have amazing resolution? No (native resolution is only 900 pixels high). Is it easy and cheap to ship? No. Can you fit it on the desk in your dorm room? Dream on.
So how the heck did it actually come to be a product? Beats the hell out of me. Maybe a half-dozen execs in Japan have one, but apart from people who would have 2000 sq ft zen-garden offices on the 40th floor, I can't imagine the potential market to have justified its development.
Or am I missing something?
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