Saturday, February 13, 2010

3D television




This year Panasonic plans to release a television that will be able to give you an amazing 3D experience. Although they are being released in Japan in April it is speculated that the United States and the UK will be waiting until the fourth quarter of the year to get them. They will be coming out in two different size models; there will be 50 and 65 inch sets witch are expected to range 4.9-6 thousand dollars. I think this is very important because when movies moved to 3D so many others followed in their footsteps. Although there will only be a limited number of stations that will have 3D broadcasts when the sets become more accessible I believe that the other stations will follow. I think that this is going to have a great impact on the audience. People highly enjoy the 3D experience. All you have to do is look at how successful Avitar was to understand that. I also think that audiences will be very excited to experience sports in 3D. HD TV now already makes you feel like you're at the game; imagine what it will feel like to be able to experience that in 3D. When I first saw a 1080 broadcast I didn't think there was anything that could top that so I don't think that 3D television is going to be the last major thing that changes TV.

http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/panasonic_debuts_viera_vt2_series_first_1080p_3d_plasma_hdtvs

There wasn't anything in the book that really spoke about 3D television.

3D Television




This year Panasonic plans to release a television that will be able to give you an amazing 3D experience. Although they are being released in Japan in April it is speculated that the United States and the UK will be waiting until the fourth quarter of the year to get them. They will be coming out in two different size models; there will be 50 and 65 inch sets witch are expected to range 4.9-6 thousand dollars. I think this is very important because when movies moved to 3D so many others followed in their footsteps. Although there will only be a limited number of stations that will have 3D broadcasts when the sets become more accessible I believe that the other stations will follow. I think that this is going to have a great impact on the audience. People highly enjoy the 3D experience. All you have to do is look at how successful Avitar was to understand that. I also think that audiences will be very excited to experience sports in 3D. HD TV now already makes you feel like you're at the game; imagine what it will feel like to be able to experience that in 3D. When I first saw a 1080 broadcast I didn't think there was anything that could top that so I don't think that 3D television is going to be the last major thing that changes TV.

http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/panasonic_debuts_viera_vt2_series_first_1080p_3d_plasma_hdtvs

There wasn't anything in the book that really spoke about 3D television.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

LOST LEAKED

The first hour of the ABC hit television show LOST leaked on to the internet before it hit television. So you would assume that many of the fans of LOST would tune in to see the first hour of the show that they've been waiting half a year for; that couldn't be further form the truth. 12.1 million poeple tune din for the season premiere "which is 1 million more than the average weekly audience lst season, and under 1 million more than last year's premiere. Last years premiere had not been leaked early but still happened to have a million less viewers. Nydailynews.com found a comment made by a fan on the site MyWhiteNoise.com "Why spoil it now? I'd rather watch it in hi-def and surround sound rather than ruin the surprise and watch some (low-quality) video." Although many of the clips online are better quality than the LOST premiere are fans saying that they would rather have the HD experience on television than be able to watch the show whenever they'd like online?

I chose this article because I found it interesting that many of the fans were not drawn to watch the show online. As a LOST fan I know how much anticipation there was for this show but I count myself part of the number that would rather have the television experience. There was jsut something about being that group of people who were all in front of their televisions from 8-11 pm watching the premier. I don't think that is something that can be replicated by online media because it is so accessible at your leisure. I think that this is important because the way things are going the internet seems to be taking on TV shows and this just proves that TVs are not yet out of the picture.

This relates to how in the text it talks about how "the web can show anything, anytime.(p326)" And this article proves that sometimes that's not what the audience wants. We still want to have to wait and build up anticipation for television shows. This is extremely evident in the programs that I watch. I am in front of my television every Tuesday night at 9 pm waiting for LOST to come on. I understand how those 12.1 million people could pass over the first hour of the show easily in order to have the experience that we all had that night.



Trailer - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8Mbum8rheg

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv/2010/02/04/2010-02-04_lost_premiere_gains_viewers_despite_early_online_leaks_many_fans_waited_for_show.html