Flat Panel Display Stocks List

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

Flat Panel 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 AMAT Applied Materials earnings reveal AI chip demand
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 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
May 17 AMAT Dow Jones Futures: Walmart, Tesla Rival Join Nvidia In Buy Areas With Market Rally At Highs
May 16 AMAT Applied Materials, Inc. (AMAT) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 16 AMAT Chip Gear Giant Applied Materials Beats Targets On DRAM Equipment Sales
Flat Panel Display

Flat-panel displays are electronic viewing technologies used to enable people to see content (still images, moving images, text, or other visual material) in a range of entertainment, consumer electronics, personal computer, and mobile devices, and many types of medical, transportation and industrial equipment. They are far lighter and thinner than traditional cathode ray tube (CRT) television sets and video displays and are usually less than 10 centimetres (3.9 in) thick. Flat-panel displays can be divided into two display device categories: volatile and static. Volatile displays require that pixels be periodically electronically refreshed to retain their state (e.g., liquid-crystal displays (LCD)). A volatile display only shows an image when it has battery or AC mains power. Static flat-panel displays rely on materials whose color states are bistable (e.g., e-book reader tablets from Sony), and as such, flat-panel displays retain the text or images on the screen even when the power is off. As of 2016, flat-panel displays have almost completely replaced old CRT displays. In many 2010-era applications, specifically small portable devices such as laptops, mobile phones, smartphones, digital cameras, camcorders, point-and-shoot cameras, and pocket video cameras, any display disadvantages of flat-panels (as compared with CRTs) are made up for by portability advantages (thinness and lightweightness).
Most 2010s-era flat-panel displays use LCD and/or LED technologies. Most LCD screens are back-lit as color filters are used to display colors. Flat-panel displays are thin and lightweight and provide better linearity and they are capable of higher resolution than typical consumer-grade TVs from earlier eras. The highest resolution for consumer-grade CRT TVs was 1080i; in contrast, many flat-panels can display 1080p or even 4K resolution. As of 2016, some devices that use flat-panels, such as tablet computers, smartphones and, less commonly, laptops, use touchscreens, a feature that enables users to select onscreen icons or trigger actions (e.g., playing a digital video) by touching the screen. Many touchscreen-enabled devices can display a virtual QWERTY or numeric keyboard on the screen, to enable the user to type words or numbers.
A multifunctional monitor (MFM) is a flat-panel display that has additional video inputs (more than a typical LCD monitor) and is designed to be used with a variety of external video sources, such as VGA input, HDMI input from a VHS VCR or video game console and, in some cases, a USB input or card reader for viewing digital photos). In many instances, an MFM also includes a TV tuner, making it similar to a LCD TV that offers computer connectivity.

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