Zenith L23W36 23-Inch Widescreen Flat-Panel HD-Ready LCD TV (Silver/Gray) Overview
The L23W36 is a new 23" Zenith LCD flat panel sporting Super IPS Technology, which has an unheard of 176 degree viewing angle with an incredibly clear 1280x768 resolution at a 400:1 Contrast Ratio and 450 cd/m2 High Brightness. At 3.3" thick, and with a unique stand that provides cable management and easy tilt and swivel, this screen can go anywhere. Perfect for any room in your house. With a variety of inputs including a computer input, this TV will fulfill all of your viewing needs.Product Features
- 23-inch HDTV/PC monitor with built-in NTSC tuner and PIP; 23.6 x 17.5 x 3.3 inches (W x H x D) without stand
- 1,280 x 768 resolution, high (400:1) contrast ratio, 450 cd/m2 brightness, 3-line digital comb filter
- High-definition progressive-scan input renders seamless, flicker-free pictures from progressive-scan DVD players and HDTV set-top boxes
- High-resolution component-video, S-video, RF, and RGB inputs
- Super IPS technology for wide, 176-degree viewing angles (H x V)
Product Specifications
Amazon.com Product Description The L23W36 widescreen HD-ready TV, designed around Zenith's first 23-inch LCD screen, features Super IPS technology, Faroudja DCDi De-Interlacer processing, and a 50,000-hour, long-life screen lamp. This innovative television lets you switch from TV to PC viewing at the touch of a button, and it uses a truly flat LCD (liquid-crystal display) to deliver razor-sharp, distortion-free images.
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Super In Plane Switching (Super IPS) technology (made by Zenith's parent company, LG Electronics) delivers unprecedented horizontal and vertical viewing angles of 176 degrees--virtually equaling those of CRTs--all the while ensuring better, clearer pictures from off-center seating positions than previously possible with an LCD. Super IPS uses a switching mode that treats light passing through the display at an angle virtually the same as light passing straight through the display. As a result, the set renders brightness, contrast, and color much more evenly, regardless of where you sit.
Picture in picture (PIP) lets you watch two channels at once, imposing a full-color inset picture in a corner of the main picture. A three-line digital comb filter enhances resolution by removing blurred edges between colors and reducing dot crawl (tiny, moving dots of color along a sharp color separation in a vertical line, as in a depiction of a character's striped T-shirt).
The set also uses Faroudja's DCDi Processor, which upconverts standard video signals (480i) to progressive-scan 480p signals, eliminating the jagged edges along diagonal lines. Progressive-scan signals create a picture using twice the scan lines of a conventional pictures, giving you higher resolution and sharper images while eliminating nearly all motion artifacts.
Parental control with V-Chip (a programmable feature that uses the U.S. standard content-advisory system to exclude viewing of specific programs or program types) helps you keep young eyes off mature content. Other features include Dolby Virtual Surround processing for simulating surround sound from the set's two 7-watt speakers, an onscreen graphic equalizer for tailoring the sound to your preference, and a long, 50,000-hour estimated lamp life.
More about DCDi
DCDi (Directional Correlational Deinterlacing) eliminates the jagged edges (also known as "jaggies" or "the staircasing effect") that appear when standard interlaced video is deinterlaced and viewed on a progressive-scan display.
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Typical motion video processing relies on something called intra-field spatial interpolation to generate the missing lines of video from interlaced sourced material. This approach successfully suppresses motion artifacts; however, moving images and diagonal edges (actually, all edges which are not strictly horizontal or vertical) create jagged edge artifacts. While missing lines are successfully generated, the information generated does not exactly match that of the edges of the object originally filmed.
DCDi takes the idea of interpolation to a much higher level. It interpolates based on how objects are moving in a scene, basing its calculations on the "big picture" instead of relying on a limited mathematical model. More specifically, it identifies all of the moving edges in a scene while adjusting the angle of interpolation at each pixel so that the interpolation always follows the edge instead of crossing it. This revolutionary approach not only eliminates jagged edges, but also achieves something that has not been available in affordable systems until now: true-to-life looking images from an interlaced source.
What's in the Box
TV, swivel stand with tilt, and a user's manual.
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