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Key software developers were later picked up by other companies. In 2008, Sharp collaborated with Emblaze Mobile on the Monolith, “…an ambitious project to design the ultimate holistic mobile device". In July 2008 Sharp announced that the model will go into production for the Japanese market.
Īt CES 2007, Sharp introduced a prototype largest LCD TV, with a screen size of 108 inches. Sharp acquired a controlling stake in Pioneer Corporation in 2007. Since then it has been constantly switching places through financial quarters against rivals Fujitsu, Apple and Sony. įrom 2005 to 2010 Sharp was the biggest mobile phone brand in Japan. In June 2005 Sharp produced the largest LCD television at the time, with a display of 65 inches. As the result, the Sakai LCD plant suffered a reduced operating rate until Q3 2012. All of those events strongly hit Sharp's LCD business.
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This hit the Japanese LCD TV market, reducing it almost by half from 2010. Via Japanese government issued coupons for digital TV sets, consumers were encouraged to purchase digital TV sets until March 2011. Furthermore, the switch to digital TV broadcasting was virtually completed in Japan by the middle of 2011. However, the 2008 financial crisis and strong Yen (especially against Won) significantly lowered world demand for Japanese LCD panels. The Sakai plant is still the only 10th generation LCD manufacturing plant on the globe and its best fit for production of 60-inch or larger panels. Since 2000, Sharp heavily invested in LCD panel manufacturing plants: Kameyama in 2004, Sakai in 2009. Sharp's Mobile Communications Division created the world's first commercial camera phone, the J-SH04, in Japan in 2000.
#Sharp printer driver download usa portable
The line was discontinued after 1981, but the Optonica line was again re-introduced in the late 1980s for a high end line of television receivers and higher quality mass market audio products such as VCR's, surround sound receivers, CD cassette boom boxes, and portable cassette players. The line was again changed, in 1981, and moved mainly into digital high end, complete stereo systems with advanced technological features setting the trend towards the digital age. During this run, Sharp introduced digital technology to some of the Optonica products, along with the traditional analogue products, and offered a complete selection of models ranging from low power high end receivers to very powerful models. The Optonica line as it was called, consisted of high quality and technically advanced components, that was expanded in 1979, to cover a broader selection of high end equipment. Sharp ventured into the high end stereo market in 1976 with the introduction of high end receivers, amplifiers, speakers, turntables and cassette players. Sharp introduced low-cost microwave ovens affordable for residential use in the late 1970s. One of the company's main inventors of LCD calculators was Tadashi Sasaki. All of these units are considered collectors items on the secondary market.
Sharp had a working relationship with Nintendo during the 1980s, and was granted licensing rights for the manufacture and development of the C1 NES TV (1983, later released in North America as the Sharp Nintendo Television), the Twin Famicom (1986), the Sharp Famicom Titler (1989), and the SF-1 SNES TV (1990). Sharp produced the first LCD calculator in 1973. The company was renamed Sharp Corporation in 1970. Also in the same era the company introduced the first microwave oven with a turntable between 19. This was the first pocketable calculator priced at less than JP¥100,000 (less than US$300), and turned out to be a popular item. Its first LSI calculator was introduced in 1969. Two years later, in 1966, Sharp introduced its first IC calculator using 145 Mitsubishi Electric-made bipolar ICs, priced at JP¥350,000 (about US$1000). It took Sharp several years to develop the product as they had no experience in making computing devices at the time. In 1964, the company developed the world's first transistor calculator (the Sharp CS-10A), which was priced at JP ¥535,000 (US$1,400). In 1953, Hayakawa Electric started producing the first Japan-made TV sets (the "Sharp TV3-14T").