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A New Focus: Electronics manufacturers are betting people will pay more for 3-D television

A New Focus: Electronics manufacturers are betting people will pay more for 3-D television

Credit: AP Photo

The glasses needed to watch 3-D TV will be a bit bulkier than the ones used for movies and will need to be recharged.


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Samsung and Panasonic will start selling 3-D TVs in U.S. stores this week, inaugurating what television-makers hope is the era of 3-D viewing in the living room.

Samsung Electronics Co. began selling two 3-D sets yesterday. Combined with the required glasses and a 3-D Blu-ray player, the prices start at about $3,000 for a 46-inch screen.

Panasonic Corp. has said it will sell its first 3-D set today.

The push into the living room comes as moviegoers have shown considerable enthusiasm for the latest wave of 3-D fare in the theater. Last weekend, Alice in Wonderland grossed an estimated $116.2 million at the box office, beating the first-weekend receipts of Avatar, the winter's 3-D blockbuster.

Although it is clear that 3-D sets for the home will appeal to technology and home-theater enthusiasts, it remains to be seen if the TVs will entice regular consumers to spend $500 or more above the price of a comparably sized standard TV and Blu-ray player.

The 3-D effect requires viewers to wear relatively bulky glasses that need to be recharged occasionally. They are not like the cheap throwaways that have been used in theaters since the 1950s.

And for now, there isn't much to watch in 3-D. Samsung is including a 3-D copy of Monsters vs. Aliens on Blu-ray discs with its packages, in a deal with the studio, DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc. Jeffrey Katzenberg, DreamWorks' chief executive, said that the company would convert its Shrek movies to 3-D for Samsung TV buyers later this year.

"We continue to see this amazing level of enthusiasm and excitement for 3-D. The rate of adoption for this into the cinema has been a rocket ship these last couple of months," Katzenberg said.

Eventually, sports and other programming that will benefit from a more immersive experience should be offered in 3-D. ESPN has said it will start a channel that will broadcast live events using the technology, starting with FIFA World Cup soccer in June.

Samsung, the world's largest maker of TVs, has high hopes for 3-D. Tim Baxter, the head of the company's U.S. electronics division, said he expects 3-D to be in 3 million to 4 million of the 35 million TV sets that all manufacturers will sell in the U.S. this year.

Sony Corp. said yesterday it will start selling its 3-D televisions in June. It said it hopes that 10 percent of the TVs it sells in the next fiscal year will be 3-D units.

Sony and Panasonic appear to be positioning their 3-D sets at a higher premium than Samsung. Panasonic hasn't revealed what its sets will cost, but it is using only high-end plasma screens.

Samsung's two new sets will be followed by another 13 3-D capable models in the next two months. Soon, 3-D packages with plasma sets will be available for about $2,000, Baxter said.

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