Mitsubishi Electric cumple 90 years celebrating at ISE 2011
Mitsubishi exhibe en ISE 2011 the first OLED display that can be composed in a circular configuration of up to 155” within a radius of one meter. It is also the debut of its new video wall made up of 70 DLP cubes.” with a Full HD resolution. These Seventy series DLP cubes have a surface area of 70” with Full HD resolution that uses LED as a light source.
Mitsubishi Electric Group cumple 90 years and celebrates it these days at ISE 2011. At its stand we can see the new family of professional displays, Seventy Series LED, with versatile design and smart, quick assembly. This series, now includes three new versions: 62” y 72” (WUXGA 1920×1200) y 70” (Native Full HD 1920×1080). With lower consumption than any other LED cube, They have a life of up to 80.000 hours. Regarding the Seventy Series Flat, The L55 HM of 55 is added to this range” with ultra-thin frame. Mitsubishi also shows its Multitouch interactive solutions for spaces with large format screen needs. Their main advantage is that they support the interactivity of multiple users at the same time., featuring a laser sensor immune to IR interference. Besides, can be grouped into an unlimited number of cubes. For interactive whiteboards, the brand has WD projectors 380 U and XD 360 U (2.500 WXGA/XGA lumens) and the EX 320-EST (XGA child 2.700 lumens).
LCD y OLED In professional LCDs the new 55 stands out” Full HD (1920×1080) with integrated speakers, while for outdoor DOOH, displays that withstand extreme temperatures and all types of inclement weather are beginning to be installed.. Spherical OLED But maybe, The star of this fair is the revolutionary Diamon Vision OLED display that with 3mm pixel per inch and a brightness of 1.200 cd/m2 allows any configuration no matter how strange it may seem. At the moment, Mitsubishi is carrying out an interesting project in Japan for a giant sphere based on this technology. The main novelty is that this screen is the first with OLED technology that can be composed in a circular configuration of up to 155” within a radius of one meter. 
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