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images (1)Offering four times the resolution of 1080p HDTVs, 4K Ultra HDTVs have been a little slow getting out of the gate. The format’s momentum seems to be increasing, however, as demand surged in March compared to February, with shipments rising from 380,000 units to more than one million, according to research firm IHS.
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Linda Lin, senior analyst for large displays at IHS, said the following about the format’s rise:

“Demand for these cutting-edge displays has been slow in growing, mainly because the televisions using the panels have proved prohibitively expensive . . . But with the technology becoming more pervasive, coupled with increasingly aggressive marketing from panel manufacturers, UHD TV panels are starting to take off.
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Ultra HDTV shipments are forecast to reach more than 15 million by the end of the year, which would account for about 6 percent of the LCD TV market.

Will you be investing in a 4K TV this year, or are you still holding out for the inevitable descent of pricing into a range that’s more affordable?

[via Home Media Magazine]

9 Responses to “Ultra HDTVs Pass 1 Million Shipments Globally in March”

  1. Member [Join Now]
    Danofive0 [danofive0]

    I will keep my 55″ LED TV. Does just great! No need to change it!

  2. Member [Join Now]
    Chad Cronin [chadcronin]

    When my tv gets old and I buy a new one I will get one that costs under $1,000 with the most features. If it has this, great, if not, I am fine.

  3. Visitor [Join Now]
    Nic Gaither [visitor]

    I’m fine with the 60″, 55″, 52″, 40″ and 36″ I have. Not one of those folks that have to jump just because a newer model comes out. Besides, if everyone keeps getting new ones, who’s gonna take the (dare I say) old flatscreens?

  4. Visitor [Join Now]
    R. Atkins [visitor]

    There’s virtually no content. I don’t understand why people are buying them at all.

  5. Member [Join Now]
    jonmac

    I am perfectly happy with 1080 P. And, as mentioned in the comment above mine, there is virtually no content for 4K. Also, 4K requires a lot more data. That means were either sticking with physical disks, or worse streaming a lot more data. If were straining a lot more data, that means were going to be charged. I can see Time Warner, Verizon, and Comcast jumping out of their pants with excitement on how much they can charge their customers.

  6. Visitor [Join Now]
    Thomas [visitor]

    I’ll hold out for when I can get a fast enough internet connection to stream it. I estimate it should reach here by 2030. Maybe.

  7. Member [Join Now]
    s142424

    Not interested.