Throw away your new 52" plasma!!!

Quote from ChkitOut:

wtf is that, i've never seen this.

This would be Nintendo's next generation of gaming console that is coming out later this year... Didn't ya know? ;)
 
I'm holding out for holographic TV. I don't think 3-D TV will get too far unless they can lose the glasses. Now, when they can project the show into my living room in life like fashion I'm interested.
 
I don't even have a HD or plasma to throw away. I'm still waiting for my 7 year old $89 Chinese TV to croak. It could be a while. My old cheapo Zenith lasted 15 years. By the time I'm ready, the actors may be putting on the show live in my living room. (god, I hope not--I wouldn't want to know most of them)

But an electric car--yes, that I'm holding out for. Not a hybrid, an electric. For that I can be an early adopter.
 
Lets take notice of all the dumb consumers who rush out to buy this garbage.


NEW YORK (AP) -- Panasonic Corp. on Wednesday revealed the price for its first 3-D TV set, confirming that $3,000 is about what it takes to be among the first to watch 3-D movies in the home.

The Japanese company put its first 3-D sets on sale at an event in New York on Wednesday. Panasonic's suggested retail price is $2,900 for a 50-inch plasma set, one pair of glasses and a 3-D Blu-ray player. An extra pair of glasses costs $150.

South Korean competitor Samsung Electronics Co. announced Tuesday that its 3-D sets would go on sale this week. For $3,000, buyers get a 46-inch set, two pairs of glasses, a 3-D Blu-ray player and a 3-D copy of "Monsters vs. Aliens." There's also a 55-inch set available -- it's $3,300 for the set alone.

Both manufacturers plan to expand their 3-D lines rapidly. Rivals are on their heels: LG Electronics Inc. plans to put its 3-D sets on sale in May and Sony Corp. is bringing out its 3-D sets this summer.

The sets can switch between 3-D and regular 2-D mode, which doesn't require glasses.

There's a dearth of movies on 3-D discs, but studios are rushing to put them out. On Wednesday, Twentieth Century Fox, the studio arm of News Corp., said it would make "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs" its debut title in 3-D Blu-ray.
 
This is a perfect example of "You don't own the stuff; the stuff owns you" Paying all that cash for a POS dangling in front of your face, just so you can see things in 3D. :)
 
3D TV does not make any sense at this stage. only obsessive compulsives may buy them so that they could watch the same 3 movies over and over and over again.

Dr. Shortie Thorndyke Out
 
Quote from bigpapi:

xray_glasses.jpg
 
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