Argentina. By the end of 2011, perceptions in that nation indicate that televisions with LCD technology will reign as the preferred solution for users, defeating its most important rival: LED and a solution that refuses to disappear like traditional or tube televisions.
One of the reasons why this phenomenon occurs has to do with prices, since LED televisions are still very expensive for the average consumer of that nation, which leads them to acquire alternatives such as LCD.
By the end of this year, projections indicate that only 800,000 units of traditional TVs will be sold while LCD and LED will reach 1.7 million. In 2010 tube TVs sold 1.5 million units against 1.3 million for LCDs and LEDs.
But the battle in sales that LCDs fight against LEDs is currently won by the first technology by five times more, although it is projected that by 2013 the sales of both solutions will be equal, and by 2014 the LED will keep 80% of the market.
The rise of both technologies has markedly decreased the use of Plasma. For example, in Argentina televisions of these characteristics are practically disappeared, although in 2011 20 million units will be sold in the world.