Даскала не е график....предполагам ше си жули форума....някое клипче....филмче.....
Ще му е хиляди пъти по добре едно ТФТ....
Аз на CRT не се връщам ако ще пари да ми дават....тва си е кола без хидравлика от 60-те

Технология на 60-70 години е време да се замени с нещо....
Early TV was based on the photoconductive properties of selenium and an apparatus called the Nipkow disk. In 1872, Joseph May and Willoughby Smith, of England Telegraph Construction and Maintenance, noted that when selenium was exposed to light, its electrical resistance decreased. Almost immediately, they thought of transmitting pictures by electricity, but never came up with a way of doing so. Paul Nipkow, a German engineer, was the first to come up with a way to scan an image onto a photoconductive surface, in 1883. His idea was a disk, with holes cut in a spiral pattern, so that as it spun, it read an entire image, one dot at a time. However, Nipkow never overcame the many problems of what came to be called mechanical scanning of an image. Despite many advances to be made in the next 50 years, these problems were inherent in the very concept of mechanical scanning, and eventually rendered it obsolete. However, these advances were crucial to TV's development, and Nipkow is rightly considered one of the inventors of television.
Inventors who put their efforts into the improvement of mechanical scanning should also be mentioned. John Logie Baird, a Scotsman, was the first to send ‘pictures by wireless,' as he termed them, sending the shadow of a cross across his laboratory in 1923, using Nipkow disks and selenium-coated screens to scan and recreate the images. Baird gave a public demonstration of "seeing by wireless" in 1925, transmitted the first face over television in 1926, achieved the first transatlantic TV broadcast in 1928, and started regularly broadcasting, under license of the BBC, in 1929.
Е крайно време е.....