JVC DLA HD100 - D-ILA projector - 600 ANSI lumens - 1920 x 1080 - widescreen - High Definition 1080p

Product Description:

The DLA-HD100 is the world's first native 30,000:1 contrast ratio D-ILA Front Projector. It brings full HD to your home with the industry's highest native contrast ratio. The "native" means that it does not rely on an iris mechanism to maximize contrast depending on the average brightness of one scene. This technical sleight of hand employed on other projectors, effectively changes overall luminosity, so that blacks are slightly bleached in bright scenes, while light colors appear duller in dark scenes.There is neither an iris mechanism nor a compromise in the DLA-HD100 projector. D-ILA is a mature technology, perfected by JVC, which can reproduce the brightest, most vivid colors simultaneously with the subtlest shadows, down to the deepest, truest blacks. Only D-ILA can reproduce in full the rich image information contained in a high definition source, be it broadcast or optical disk.
Product Details
  • Feature:
  • 30,000:1 native contrast ratio
  • HDMI version 1.3 (Deep Color)
  • Resolution 1,920 x 1,080 pixels
  • Full HD D-ILA device
  • AnalogVideoFormat: NTSC
  • Binding: Electronics
  • Brand: JVC
  • EAN: 0046838032745
  • HardwarePlatform: PC
  • Label: JVC
  • Manufacturer: JVC
  • Model: HD100
  • MPN: DLA-HD100
  • PackageQuantity: 1
  • ProductGroup: CE
  • ProductTypeName: VIDEO_PROJECTOR
  • Publisher: JVC
  • Studio: JVC
  • UPC: 046838032745

Electronics Articles

Camera basics: shutter-speed, aperture and ISO
In this article, I’ll introduce you to the basic elements that you can use to control exposure in your shooting. If you have a digital SLR, there will be a way to set all of these controls on your camera, but since they differ between manufacturers and models, you’ll need to refer to your camera’s manual to find out exactly how to change them. All cameras, whether an ancient film camera, or a more modern digital, work in pretty much the same way. Photographs are taken by letting light fall onto a light-sensitive medium, which records the image. Traditionally, this has been film, but more recently, it tends to be a digital sensor. The more light that falls onto the film or sensor, the lighter the image. Put simply, a camera consists of a light-tight box that stores a light-sensitive device (either a film or a digital sensor), a lens that magnifies and focuses the image onto that light-sensitive device through a hole in the box (called the aperture) , and a shutter that opens ...
Professional video camera
A Professional video camera (often called a Television camera even though the use has spread) is a high-end device for recording electronic moving images (as opposed to a movie camera, that records the images on film). Originally developed for use in television studios, they are now commonly used for corporate and educational videos, music videos, direct-to-video movies, etc. There are two types of professional video cameras: High end portable, recording cameras (essentially, high-end camcorders) used for ENG and EFP image acquisition, and studio cameras which lack the recording capability of a camcorder, and are often fixed on studio pedestals. Portable professional cameras are generally much larger than consumer cameras and are designed to be carried on the shoulder. Technology It is common for professional cameras to split the incoming light into the three primary colors that humans are able to see, feeding each color into a separate pickup tube (in older cameras) or charge ...