PARIS and HOLLYWOOD, CA--(Marketwired - May 14, 2013) - New Version Adds Powerful Tools for Fast, Professional Results, Plus a New Fully Functional Trial Version Technicolor, a worldwide technology ...
Think back to the last time you bought a brightly colored item online: A laptop, a smartphone, a pair of shoes, a hat. How closely did the item displayed on your computer monitor match the color of ...
There's THX certification for TVs, ensuring potential buyers that they'll get solid home-theater visuals, so why shouldn't there be an equivalent for your gadgets' displays? Technicolor, along with ...
Partnerships with Portrait Displays and Marseille Networks take consumer viewing experience to a dramatic new level Paris (France) - June 20, 2013 - Technicolor, a worldwide technology leader in the ...
It’s an all-too familiar historical cycle: revolutionary technology falls to the wayside as new and more exciting equipment emerges. Boxes of VHS tapes (and now DVDs) sit in storage, untouched for ...
GoPro, the world's most versatile camera, and Technicolor, a worldwide leader in technology and color-science, announced today at the NAB 2012 Show in Las Vegas they have worked to embed Technicolor's ...
Accurate color representation is more important than ever given the wide variety of content – including video content from streaming media services, Blu-ray Discs, and photos featuring diverse color ...
Hollywood may soon need to bid farewell to a visual effects giant credited with bringing classic films such as “Gone with the Wind” and “The Wizard of Oz” to full color. Technicolor, the 110-year-old ...
A century ago, people worried that color would ruin motion pictures; instead, it changed visual narratives forever. The two-color process worked by filming with a beam-splitting prism behind the lens ...
Technicolor film was not color film, and it did not produce anything like lifelike colors. But how did it produce color movies? And why did those colors glow? And why did all of it lead to Dorothy ...
There's THX certification for TVs, ensuring potential buyers that they'll get solid home-theater visuals, so why shouldn't there be an equivalent for your gadgets' displays? Technicolor, along with ...