Thursday, October 14, 2010

Consumers Fail to Take a Shine to 3-D TVs



3-D could just be a fad and consumers may be already losing interest. Sales of 3-D TVs have not been growing as fast as TV-makers expected this year, says research firm DisplaySearch.
High price of the devices and the unavailability of good 3-D content have contributed to the lack of consumer enthusiasm for 3-D TVs, says the company.
Just about 3.2 million 3-D TVs are expected to be shipped worldwide this year. Of these, just about 1.6 million will be in North America.
?While TV manufacturers have bold plans and a lot of new products, consumers remain cautious,? says Paul Gray, director of TV electronics research at DisplaySearch.
3-D TVs were billed as the breakthrough consumer electronics product of the year. Spurred by Hollywood?s success with 3-D movies such as Avatar and Alice in Wonderland, TV makers rushed into launching big-screen 3-D TVs. Almost every major TV manufacturer including Sony, LG, Panasonic and Mitsubishi showed 3-D TVs at the Consumer Electronics Show this year.
Earlier this week, LG introduced a 72-inch 3-D TV, claiming it is the biggest 3-D commerical TV available to consumers currently. In the U.S. big retail stores such as Best Buy and Costco have started selling 3-D TVs.
But so far, consumer reaction to 3-D TVs, has been muted.� Consumers haven?t entirely bought into the value of having 3-D content in their living room. Eyestrain, fatigue and nausea in some people who watch 3-D content has also dampened enthusiasm for 3-D TVs. (See: Four things that could keep 3-D TVs out of your living room)
What TV makers haven?t also solved is the problem of special glasses required to view 3-D. Despite the introduction of the Nintendo 3DS, a 3.5-inch handheld 3-D game console that doesn?t require any special glasses, glass-free technology is years away for the big screen.
But even for those consumers who are ready to don a pair of glasses to watch the TV in their living room, it isn?t easy. 3-D glasses are engineered so they will work only with the brand of TV with which they?re shipped. That means glasses that work with Sony?s 3-D� television won?t work for watching Monday night football at a friend?s place on his Panasonic 3-D TV.
Meanwhile, 3-D content remains scarce. Channels such as ESPN, DirecTV and Discovery have promised 3-D channels that will begin broadcasting only in 2011.
DisplaySearch says it is hopeful some of the constraints around 3-D TV can be solved and 3-D TVs will catch on. Prices of 3-D TVs are likely to fall, says the firm, even as the technology gets better.
Sales of 3-D will TVs grow from 2 percent of all flat panel TVs shipped this year to 41 percent, according to DisplaySearch?s forecast.
See Also:
4 Things That Could Keep 3-D TV Out of Your Living Room
Toshiba Crams Supercomputer Guts Into 3-D, Web TV
Wired Explains: How 3-D Television Works
3-D PCs Will Make a Splash at Computex
3-D: Coming Soon to a Cellphone Near You
Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com
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