Liquid Crystal Display Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Liquid Crystal Display stocks.

Liquid Crystal Display Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 AMAT What the Options Market Tells Us About Applied Mat
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials (AMAT) Q2 Earnings & Revenues Top Estimates
May 17 AMAT Dow Jones Holds Strong Near 40,000; GameStop Slammed On Share Offering, But Reddit Jumps On OpenAI Pact
May 17 MPWR Chip Stocks Poised to Wrap Up Another Blockbuster Week
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials earnings reveal AI chip demand
May 17 APD Air Products and Chemicals declares $1.77 dividend
May 17 AMAT Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Applied Materials, and Other Tech Stocks in Focus Today
May 17 AMAT Stock Market Hits Highs On Cooling Inflation; Walmart Jumps On Earnings: Weekly Review
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials: Q2 Earnings Results Simply Not Good Enough
May 17 APD Air Products Declares Quarterly Dividend
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials gets renewed vote of confidence from Wall Street after Q2 results
May 17 AMAT These Analysts Boost Their Forecasts On Applied Materials After Upbeat Results
May 17 AMAT Walmart To Rally Over 17%? Here Are 10 Top Analyst Forecasts For Friday
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials to Participate in Upcoming Investor Conferences
May 17 AMAT Q2 2024 Applied Materials Inc Earnings Call
May 17 AMAT What's Going On With Applied Materials Stock Today?
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials Offers Fiscal Third-Quarter Outlook in Line With Street Views
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials, RBC Bearings And 3 Stocks To Watch Heading Into Friday
May 17 AMAT Reddit, GameStop, Take-Two Interactive, Applied Materials, Tesla On Investors' Radars As Dow Hits Historic 40K Milestone
May 17 AMAT Applied Materials (AMAT) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Liquid Crystal Display

A liquid-crystal display (LCD) is a flat-panel display or other electronically modulated optical device that uses the light-modulating properties of liquid crystals. Liquid crystals do not emit light directly, instead using a backlight or reflector to produce images in color or monochrome. LCDs are available to display arbitrary images (as in a general-purpose computer display) or fixed images with low information content, which can be displayed or hidden, such as preset words, digits, and seven-segment displays, as in a digital clock. They use the same basic technology, except that arbitrary images are made up of a large number of small pixels, while other displays have larger elements. LCDs can either be normally on (positive) or off (negative), depending on the polarizer arrangement. For example, a character positive LCD with a backlight will have black lettering on a background that is the color of the backlight, and a character negative LCD will have a black background with the letters being of the same color as the backlight. Optical filters are added to white on blue LCDs to give them their characteristic appearance.
LCDs are used in a wide range of applications, including LCD televisions, computer monitors, instrument panels, aircraft cockpit displays, and indoor and outdoor signage. Small LCD screens are common in portable consumer devices such as digital cameras, watches, calculators, and mobile telephones, including smartphones. LCD screens are also used on consumer electronics products such as DVD players, video game devices and clocks. LCD screens have replaced heavy, bulky cathode ray tube (CRT) displays in nearly all applications. LCD screens are available in a wider range of screen sizes than CRT and plasma displays, with LCD screens available in sizes ranging from tiny digital watches to very large television receivers. LCDs are slowly being replaced by OLEDs, which can be easily made into different shapes, and have a lower response time, wider color gamut, virtually infinite color contrast and viewing angles, lower weight for a given display size and a slimmer profile (because OLEDs use a single glass or plastic panel whereas LCDs use two glass panels; the thickness of the panels increases with size but the increase is more noticeable on LCDs) and potentially lower power consumption (as the display is only "on" where needed and there is no backlight). OLEDs, however, are more expensive for a given display size due to the very expensive electroluminescent materials or phosphors that they use. Also due to the use of phosphors, OLEDs suffer from screen burn-in and there is currently no way to recycle OLED displays, whereas LCD panels can be recycled, although the technology required to recycle LCDs is not yet widespread. Attempts to increase the lifespan of LCDs are quantum dot displays, which offer similar performance as an OLED display, but the Quantum dot sheet that gives these displays their characteristics can not yet be recycled.
Since LCD screens do not use phosphors, they rarely suffer image burn-in when a static image is displayed on a screen for a long time, e.g., the table frame for an airline flight schedule on an indoor sign. LCDs are, however, susceptible to image persistence. The LCD screen is more energy-efficient and can be disposed of more safely than a CRT can. Its low electrical power consumption enables it to be used in battery-powered electronic equipment more efficiently than CRTs can be. By 2008, annual sales of televisions with LCD screens exceeded sales of CRT units worldwide, and the CRT became obsolete for most purposes.

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