Your point is self-conflicting.
(1)- Yes, the industry has already massively moved towards lower-power TV's. Basically all LCD sets already comply with the new requirements, particularly the LED backlit ones.
(2)- How will this end with 'less TV for the money'? Certain energy hog models, probably some of the older Plasma sets, will get discontinued, but as the future lies with LED and OLED, which are very low power usage, explain that to me?
(3)- This legislation doesn't affect current owners of any TV. If you have a 50" 4-year-old Plasma that sucks juice like nobody's business, you're free to keep right on using it.
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I don't think this legislation will have much impact at all, but it's certainly nothing to go batty over. California does indeed do some stupid things, but it often makes sense in the context of their state. They are extremely overpopulated, and so the emissions improvements have helped a lot with the air quality out there, even though it's still poor. Their power requirements are also extremely large, so movements towards energy efficiency will help, this will be doubly important if plug-in hybrids/electrics start gaining steam.
I'm a classical conservative (think WFB) but this is a non-issue to me. My primary concern with the liberal conventional wisdom from the politician's viewpoint is their reluctance to expand nuclear energy. It's worlds cleaner than coal, more versatile/reliable compared to wind/solar, and with a surplus of cheap electricity we could indeed move a lot of transportation consumption to a nuclear-powered energy grip rather than dumping untold billions to the oil companies and overseas oligarchs.
So long plasma screens...
Fluoride, that's it. Hey, I'm glad. I watch my energy usage and I don't want a TV that uses 200 watts. This laptop uses less than 30 watts.
With the switch to LED for the light source, displays should drop power use by about 30% and the picture will actually look better because with LED light you can dim parts of the picture while having other areas bright.
With the current backlight you either get all bright or all dim which makes for poor blacks.
I have no problem with California doing this. It helps everyone else out. At least they have the balls.
Agreed. Industry is slow to enact change or outright resists it so we legislate it.
I'm sure the free market loons will be in here soon to tell us how we have no right to legislate what we want...too late.
If our infrastructure cannot provide enough electricity to meet demand the solution isn't to reduce the demand- the solution is to increase energy output by improving infrastructure. Its only natural that energy demand will increase as the state grows and develops.
If our infrastructure cannot provide enough electricity to meet demand the solution isn't to reduce the demand- the solution is to increase energy output by improving infrastructure. Its only natural that energy demand will increase as the state grows and develops.
see, this is what's wrong with america. everyone wants their 8 liter fahv' hunnert horsepowa vehicle, 5000 square foot house, and 60" TV, resources be damned.
yes, as a population grows, more resources will be consumed. that doesn't mean reducing consumption is in any way a bad thing, you jackass.
It has to be one or the other. Either it will save huge amounts of electricity, or it will raise the cost of televisions, if only by reducing competition as less energy efficient models can't be sold. After all, the only reason to make an energy guzzling TV is because for the size and performance it is cheaper. My disgust over the bill isn't really either of these things, though; it's that the California legislature is dealing with penny ante things like this when the state is literally collapsing.
California could really use some big pebble bed reactors, but its political climate precludes them. I think the most likely scenario is that nuclear plants get built in Nevada and the electricity transmitted into California, probably with the rest of the country paying for it.
Your point is self-conflicting.
(2)- How will this end with 'less TV for the money'? Certain energy hog models, probably some of the older Plasma sets, will get discontinued, but as the future lies with LED and OLED, which are very low power usage, explain that to me?
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Hmmm... priced out LED backlit LCD's lately? I'd rather have a 50" plasma 1080P for less than $1000, than a $3000 LED backlit LCD that will probably save me $200 in it's lifetime in energy costs over a $1000 set. Also, they're enacting even stricter standards in a short amount of time so we're going to end up in Kalifornia with a situation akin to what the Euro's with their "volume-limited" ipods/iphones: The "Kalifornia Energy Saving Feature" : from here on out, Kalifornia screens will have 50% brightness compared to other LCD's you can buy in the other 49 states.
Oh, I don't have a TV. I do have a 1080p projector and a 106" screen .
