by
Clive Young
By Clive Young. At the Winter NAMM show
in Anaheim earlier this month, it was business as usual. There were
product announcements, aging rockstars and their cohorts, packed aisles
full of tire-kickers, and lots of music. Perhaps the most striking
thing, however, was the fact that the show really was “business as
usual.”
by
Clive Young
by Mel Lambert. In the week that James Cameron’s Avatar
crested $1 billion in box office receipts, 3D delivery and playback was
the prominent theme at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas. Samsung, Panasonic, Toshiba, Sony, JVC and even Vizio unveiled
new 3D-TV receivers (some models even convert 2D content into immersive
3D), while ESPN, Fox Sports, DirecTV and Discovery Communications (in
partnership with Sony and IMAX) plan to launch 3D-TV networks. And
several brands will offer 3D-capable Blu-Ray players, while Panasonic
introduced its first fully integrated, pro-quality 3D camcorder.
Graphics-card guru Nvidia also unveiled 3D options for laptop and
desktop PCs.
by
Clive Young
Raw materials in a staging area of sE Electronics’3000 square meter factory and headquarters in Shanghai. All stages of manufacturing are performed onsite,save for electroplating of some metal parts. Workers manually prepare capsule housingsin the sE Electronics factory.Computer controlled CNC lathes