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Through improvements in LCD parts and materials, monitor weight has been reduced over earlier models, making it easier to transport and install the display.
Introducing a highly responsive touchscreen monitor that brings a new dimension of interactive functionality to the workplace. This 20-inch-class touchscreen LCD panel delivers full HD resolution with performance-enhancing UV2A technology. Its 10-point multi-touch screen provides extremely quick response for writing and touch gestures. When connected to a device running Windows® 8, the monitor serves as a beautifully intuitive interface.
The LL-S201A is compatible with devices running Windows® 8, the latest operating system from Microsoft. Windows® 8 supports smooth and intuitive touchscreen functionality, which can be experienced to its fullest on this beautifully responsive LCD monitor.
The bundled Sharp Pen Software lets users enjoy natural handwriting functionality. Once documents have been imported as images and displayed on the touchscreen, users can quickly write and draw directly on the screen surface using the bundled touch pen or a finger. Sharp Pen Software also features an overlay mode that enables onscreen handwriting regardless of the application being used.
The LL-S201A’s 20-inch-class LCD panel incorporates Sharp’s UV2A* technology. This ensures highly efficient use of light from the backlight and prevents light leakage, for the display of truly bright whites and extremely deep blacks. The LL-S201A also boasts 1,920 x 1,080-pixel full-HD resolution to ensure that none of the detail or visual impact is lost. Everything from fine text to intricate graphics is rendered with impressive precision.
SHARP Pen Software features a handwriting recognition function* that converts selected onscreen handwriting into standard text. It can also recognise handwritten shapes—such as circles, triangles, and straight lines—and automatically convert them into objects. This smart and convenient function makes it easy to utilise onscreen content to make a legible record of your lesson or meeting.
The user interface of SHARP Pen Software is simple to operate. It incorporates a menu comprising smartly arranged icons that make it easy to adjust pen settings and access various useful functions. In overlay mode, you can write onscreen annotations or graphics directly onto photos, videos, Adobe® PDFs, and common Microsoft® Office files. Text and graphics written on the board can be easily stored in USB memory* or sent directly via e-mail to selected recipients. The software links smoothly with the PowerPoint® application, enabling you to perform various control operations during slideshow presentations.
The full-HD (1,920 x 1,080-pixel) resolution of the 65-inch LCD monitor ensures that detailed text and images are reproduced vividly and accurately. Even in bright rooms, screen content is crystal clear, so everyone can stay focused on the discussion.
Sharp Corp. said on Friday it would begin selling a 65-inch liquid crystal display (LCD) television, the biggest in the world, encroaching on the turf of Matsushita Electric Industrial and other makers of plasma TVs.
Sharp, the world’s largest LCD TV producer, already markets a 45-inch model and is keen to expand its footprint in the fast-growing market for flat TVs above 40 inches, a segment now dominated by plasma and rear-projection models.
At a packed news conference in Tokyo, Sharp also unveiled a series of new sets ranging from 22 to 45 inches that are equipped with an advanced backlight for improved color production, and said it would launch TVs in the 50-inch range by the end of 2005.
“From small sizes to large sizes, the TV market belongs to liquid crystal displays,” Takashi Okuda, corporate director and general manager of Sharp’s audiovisual systems group, told reporters after the briefing.
Sharp’s suggested price is below the 1.85 million yen being charged for Matsushita’s 65-inch model on a retailer’s Website. And unlike Sharp’s TV, Matsushita’s display is not equipped with a tuner, which must be purchased separately to watch broadcast TV.
The announcement could force Matsushita to lower the price of its 65-inch plasma display and may pressure some LCD TV makers as well. South Korea’s LG Electronics, for example, currently markets a 55-inch LCD television for about $19,000.
And as Sharp plans initially to produce only 300 65-inch TVs per month, the new set is unlikely to boost profits in the near term. Most of the 4.0 million LCD sets it expects to sell in the current business year to March are in the 20- to 40-inch range.
In March, South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. announced it had developed an 82-inch LCD panel. Matsushita, meanwhile, has organised meetings with the media in an attempt to emphasise the merits of plasma over LCD.
“Sharp’s real aim at this point is not to sell a lot of 65-inch TVs. The announcement is a message showing the market that it is making technological advancements,” said Hisakazu Torii, director of TV market research at DisplaySearch Japan.
Sharp said its 65-inch TV was better than similarly sized plasma sets because unlike plasma models it can produce an image with resolution of 1,920 horizontal by 1,080 vertical pixels.