It's still very expensive and they're having a few technical issues. Life expectancy for one and some color consistency issues. The one thing it will do once they work it all out is it will produce a true white. Makes calibration and true representation of colors a good thing.
Working in the tv biz I saw Sony's first color-grade LCD for post production about a year ago. 20 inch LCD and a $1000 an inch. Pretty impressive for an LCD. It's still no glass monitor. I am interested in what the scoop is with laserTV. Supposedly a few of those have hit the marketplace.
As a music critic and journalist, I can get pretty jaded about listening to the new CDs that cross my desk (or, increasingly, the digital downloads or streams that are grudgingly entrusted to me by record labels through top-secret back alleys of the Interwebs). But I can