Further to our
earlier report that Pioneer plans to outsource its plasma TV panel production, here's more updates from several articles.
Reuters
reported Tuesday that the
company will cease production of its own plasma panels because that portion of
its business continues to lose money. The company will still sell plasma sets,
but plans to get its plasma panels from Matsushita, parent company of Panasonic,
the Nikkei business daily reported. Panasonic is the biggest plasma TV
vendor in the world, shipping nearly 40 percent of all plasma displays, while
Pioneer ranks fifth, shipping just over 6 percent of plasmas worldwide in the
fourth quarter of 2007, according to DisplaySearch.
So far, Pioneer isn't confirming or denying the reports ("Our headquarters
are planning to publicly discuss our TV strategy at the end of this week, so
we'll have no information until then," said a spokesperson), but it doesn't look
good.
As CNET colleague and resident TV expert David Katzmaier put it, this news
amounts to "a black day for black levels".
Pioneer has been repositioning its plasma business over the last few years as
a premium brand, most recently pushing its
"Kuro" technology, which emphasizes deep black levels and contrast, at CES 2007 and 2008. CNET
Reviews ranked the 50-inch plasma from Pioneer as
the best it's ever tested last year.
Though it appears Pioneer will continue to sell plasmas sets, if it's not
making the panels, it seems unlikely that it will prolong the life of its Kuro
technology. Pioneer is, however, already planning to buy liquid crystal display
panels from Sharp in order to start selling LCD TVs. LCD sets have quickly
become the fastest-growing TV technology, displacing traditional cathode-ray
tube sets, as well as rear-projection and plasma.
Via
Crave CNET
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