
The evolution of television goes a long way, from the old school knob laden black and white CRT based TV, to color TV, (remote control was introduced somewhere here), to LCD flat screen, to Plasma screen and finally, the now emerging LED TV. What’s next? You know what they say, when you hit the peak, there’s no way to go but up and Mitsubishi might just be the next “up” of the “tubeâ€. Mitsubishi just marked the laser era with their new LaserVue Laser TV. It uses the world’s purest light source to deliver the greatest picture in the planet. The laser beam brings unmatched range of rich and complex colors, unparalleled clarity, and realistic depth field. It can deliver up to two times the color of today’s leading HDTV with just around one-third or one-fourth of power consumption. The LaserVue TV produces great images in Full 1920 × 1080 HD resolution.
Their flagship model is the LaserVue L75-A91–a 75-inch HDTV monster which features Plush1080p 5G video processing that converts 12-Bit lower resolution signals to 1080p, exclusive LaserVue Light engine, Cinema Color, Stream TV Internet Media for internet connectivity, Perfect Tint, Perfect Color, 4 HDMI with CEC inputs, and wired IR inputs. Additionally, it has an Ethernet port and two USB ports. The LaserVue L75-A91 measures 41.7 inches in height, 66.4 inches in width, 15 inches in depth, and weighs only 154 pounds.
The only downside is, like any laser, this TV will burn a hole in your pocket for $5,999.00.

As seen in trusted video game review sites, sound is a critical factor in assessing how good a game is. It could somehow make or break the gaming experience of the user. But even if game developers will make their game sounds good as long as you have a bad set of equipment, it would just ruin everything. It is like playing a PS3 game with sounds that seem to came like from NES – it just brings the game down. Now, you might agree with me and I can introduce a headset that would be suitable for you, the Logitech G35.

