Διάβαζα προ ολίγου το review της Philips 42PFL7662D στο hdtvtest.co.uk και στην τελευταία ενότητα υπάρχει το εξής σχόλιο:
"... To me, Philips is a company that has mastered the art of producing flat panels that dazzle in showrooms. When Colin and I started this website back in February 2007, the very first HDTV we went out and buy was the Philips 42PF9831D, because we were so impressed by its picture performance which outshone a Sony W2000 and a Panasonic PX600 flanking it in the Trafford Centre John Lewis AV room.
However, once we brought it back to our test environment, we discovered to our dismay that achieving D65 with the 42PF9831D was more difficult than Pete Doherty quitting drugs. It's a similar story with the 42PFL7662D – Philips appeared to have hardcoded some gamma manipulation and colour decoder deviation designed to make the panel stand out from rival televisions in showrooms... at the expense of colour and greyscale accuracy.
My point is this: some people like this sort of picture, and I can understand why. It's sharp. It's bright. It's vivid. ...
...
P.S. Back to the Philips 42PF9831D story. We later reviewed the Sony KDL40W2000 and Panasonic TH42PX70 (successor to PX600) on which we achieved D65 greyscale with no colour decoding error fairly easily. Post-calibration, their picture quality simply blew the 42PF9831D away (in the eyes of two D65 zealots of course).
Μήπως μπορεί κάποιος με περισσότερες τεχνικές γνώσεις να μου εξηγήσει τι εννοεί ο reviewer;
"... To me, Philips is a company that has mastered the art of producing flat panels that dazzle in showrooms. When Colin and I started this website back in February 2007, the very first HDTV we went out and buy was the Philips 42PF9831D, because we were so impressed by its picture performance which outshone a Sony W2000 and a Panasonic PX600 flanking it in the Trafford Centre John Lewis AV room.
However, once we brought it back to our test environment, we discovered to our dismay that achieving D65 with the 42PF9831D was more difficult than Pete Doherty quitting drugs. It's a similar story with the 42PFL7662D – Philips appeared to have hardcoded some gamma manipulation and colour decoder deviation designed to make the panel stand out from rival televisions in showrooms... at the expense of colour and greyscale accuracy.
My point is this: some people like this sort of picture, and I can understand why. It's sharp. It's bright. It's vivid. ...
...
P.S. Back to the Philips 42PF9831D story. We later reviewed the Sony KDL40W2000 and Panasonic TH42PX70 (successor to PX600) on which we achieved D65 greyscale with no colour decoding error fairly easily. Post-calibration, their picture quality simply blew the 42PF9831D away (in the eyes of two D65 zealots of course).
Μήπως μπορεί κάποιος με περισσότερες τεχνικές γνώσεις να μου εξηγήσει τι εννοεί ο reviewer;