New Sharp AQUOS High-Definition LCD TV Series is Bigger and Smaller at the Same Time; New D64U Line Combines Superior Picture Performance and Space Saving Design “The AQUOS LCD TV line has always set ...
Sharp bolsters LCD leadership with large, widescreen 1080p HDTVs with enhanced performance and ultra-competitive price points, produced at the world’s first 8th generation LCD plant “With our new ...
When is big not big enough? Apparently when it's Sharp's "spectacularge" 70-inch AQUOS LCD HDTVs that were introduced earlier this year, and have now been surpassed by a new 80-inch model the company ...
Sharp previewed a number of technology firsts and the broadest line of flat-panel TVs at the 2005 Consumer Electronics Show. A highlight of the booth was the 65-inch AQUOS, this week's world's largest ...
Good evening friends, welcome back to HH. In case you missed it, we just posted a review of MSI's latest drive, the XA52P CD-RW DVD-ROM Serial ATA Combo. Coming bundled with three interchangeable face ...
Today in New York City, at Rockefeller Center’s Top of the Rock, Sharp unveiled the D64U line of Aquos LCD TVs, 25% thinner than previous models at a slim 3 1/4 inches thickness. They also have ...
Sharp's new 45-inch HDTV AQUOS Liquid Crystal Televisions, models LC-45GD5U and LC-45GD7U, are widescreen Digital Cable Ready televisions with built-in CableCARD slots. These models feature an ...
Sharp Japan announced [JP] the Aquos Quattron 3D LC-70X5 for the local market yesterday, a follow-up of sorts to the LC-70LE735U that’s been available in the States for a few months now. Just like ...
Sharp have announced a new range of AQUOS LED-backlit LCD TVs, the LE700 series, ranging in size from 32- to 52-inches. Each offering Full HD 1080p, they use Sharp's X-Gen LCD panel with 10-bit ...
Here at Crave we often get asked about 1080p 32-inch LCD televisions and our stock response is that at such small sizes the benefits of a high-resolution screen are small. You might as well save your ...
Alex Kidman is a freelance word writing machine masquerading as a person, a disguise he's managed for over fifteen years now, including a three year stint at ZDNet/CNET Australia. He likes cats, retro ...