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Panasonic - Television | LCD HDTV - 32" VIERA G1 Series - 720p, 120Hz Motion Picture Pro3 | Model: TC-L32G1
LCD TV
product code; part number; part no; model number; model no TC-L32G1

LCD TV ▪ Panasonic ▪ TC-L32G1 ▪ P/037988984705
1 year limited warranty


Updated 11/16/2009 7:55:20 PM UTC (4 days, 11 hours, 47 minutes ago)
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Product Release Date: April, 2009
Time in Market: 7 months

This product is likely current (available at retail)

In product area: Home / Games & Entertainment
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Product Description
Panasonic’s top-of-the-line LCD is the VIERA G1 series featuring the 1080p TC-L37G1, 37-inch class (37” measured diagonally) TV and the 720p TC-L32G1, 32-inch class (31.5” measured diagonally) model. Both TVs offer 120Hz Motion Picture Pro3 technology that ensures crisp, focused images for sports, dramatic action, and all other fast-moving scenes; an IPS Alpha Display Panel that deliver a 178º wide viewing angle and bright, clear images from any location in the room; and VIERA Image Viewer that provides the consumer with an easy way to view and share their digital photos via the TV’s built-in SD card reader. The G1 LCD’s also feature VIERA Link™; a PC input; Game mode, a 20:000:1 contrast ratio; 3 HDMI inputs, and a swivel base and narrow bezel design. The G1 series will be available in April 2009.

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Panasonic’s Industry Leading Technology Recognized by CES Innovation Awards. Panasonic One-Inch Thin Plasma and LUMIX Digital Camera Win Popular Science Magazine’s “The Best of What’s New”. Panasonic Debuts Multimedia Audio System Photo Frame. Panasonic's Uniquely-Designed 360° Quick Steam/Dry Iron Wins CEA Innovations 2010 Design & Engineering Award. Panasonic Home & Environment Company Announces the It’s Easy Being Green Sweepstakes. Panasonic Launches Online Resource Designed to Educate HVAC Professionals on Home Ventilation Solutions. Panasonic to Show Full HD 3D Home Theater, Expanded tru2way Solutions at Cable-Tec Expo 2009. Panasonic Earns Good Housekeeping Seal for Wide Range of Home and Personal Care Products. Panasonic Introduces Industry’s First Bluetooth Enabled Telephone Featuring “Cellular Phonebook Transfer”. Panasonic Introduces the Next Generation of Network Cameras for Businesses.
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Product Support & Downloads. FAQs Regarding LCD TVs. Panasonic Product Support. Panasonic Product Registration (Protect your investment! Register your product.). Locate Panasonic Service Center (Locate the closest Panasonic Authorized Service Center). Contact Panasonic Customer Service (Contact Panasonic by email, by phone 1-800-211-PANA (7262), or by mail.).
News and Tips & Techniques
News
Facebook, Twitter coming to Vizio TVs
  (Credit: Vizio) First announced at CES, the list of Web widgets packed into forthcoming Vizio high-definition TVs is growing. On Tuesday, Vizio announced that some of the most popular services on the Web will be directly accessible from the TV screen, including eBay, Facebook, Twitter, and Rallypoint Sports. Showtime, Web ...
 7/09/2009 7:32 PM (134d 12h 10m ago)
Best Buy + TiVo does not equal HDTVs with built-in DVRs
  The news that Best Buy and TiVo are teaming up to share technology and hopefully pump up each other's sales has led some to conclude that new HDTVs with digital video recording capability are in the offing. That's highly unlikely. TiVo, the inventor of the DVR market that ...
 7/09/2009 7:31 PM (134d 12h 11m ago)
Sharp introduces new LED-backlit LCDs
 The LC-52LE700UN is one of Sharp's new LED-backlit Aquos TVs.(Credit: Sharp) Sharp's first line of LED-based LCD displays is called the LC-LE700UN series, and it's available in four screen sizes. Here's a quick look: Models (availability, suggested retail price) LC-32LE700UN (July, $1,100) LC-40LE700UN (...
 7/09/2009 7:31 PM (134d 12h 11m ago)
Supreme Court declines to hear remote storage DVR appeal, cloud recording is on the way
 It seems like Cablevision and others have been trying to roll out "remote storage" network DVRs forever, and now that the Supreme Court has decided against hearing the appeal of the Hollywood studios looking to block it, they should finally be able to deliver as soon as this summer. Of course, there's benefits to having a locally stored copy of I'm A Celebrity Get Me Out of Here, but just in case we forgot to queue up a recording, the power went out or suffered some other manner of catastrophe, we'd still have access to all the Lou Diamond Phillips anyone could ask for, and there's really no way the highest court in the land could get in the way of that.Filed under: HDTV, Home EntertainmentSupreme Court declines to hear remote storage DVR appeal, cloud recording is on the way originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Jun 2009 12:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
 6/29/2009 5:24 PM (144d 14h 18m ago)
Why connected HDTVs are the future
 LG launched two broadband-equipped HDTVs this week--the 47-inch 47LH50 and the 50-inch 50PS80. Both televisions boast NetCast Entertainment Access, which provides consumers with the entire Netflix streaming library of more than 12,000 movies and TV episodes. This LG HDTV streams Netflix content. Are you ready for more?(Credit: LG) The LG HDTVs released this week require a broadband connection to work with the NetCast Entertainment Access service. To choose a film, users need only to surf through the items and make selections on the right of the screen. They can read movie synopses and rate films. LG isn't the only company bringing connected HDTVs to store shelves. Toshiba is well on its way to bringing its Regza line of HDTVs into the streaming realm. When the connected HDTVs launch later this year, Toshiba plans to give consumers access to a variety of content, including local weather, top news stores, sports scores, videos, and more. The HDTVs will also be able to access multimedia content stored on a connected PC's hard drive. Surprised by the sudden uptick in connected HDTVs coming to store shelves? Don't be--it's the future. ... Originally posted at The Digital Home
 6/15/2009 4:10 PM (158d 15h 32m ago)
Good-bye, rabbit ears? Not so fast
 Congratulations! You've successfully made the switch from analog to digital TV. So is it good-bye to rabbit ears? Not quite! Retro TV antennas may not bring in a perfect picture, but they can bring back some great memories.(Credit: CBS) Whatever your view of television, be it couch potato casual or flat-screen fanatic, Friday was a special occasion. And even if you didn't give it the kind of warm reception some Chicago students did on Friday night, complete with champagne toasts, you knew it was the end of an era, if for no other reason than all those incessant reminders we've been giving you, like "The Big Switch From Analog To Digital TV" or "Flipping The Switch To Digital TV". In these days of cable and satellite, you probably thought it was time for a requiem for the old rabbit ears. Not so fast. "The antenna is alive and well," said Michael Godar, who runs one of the nation's few handmade antenna companies out of a TV repair shop in Gilbert, Ariz. And he says that, even at the dawn of the Digital Age, there's plenty of life in that old antenna. "There was almost a sport (in) adjusting your antenna on your TV," Sieberg said. "Oh yeah, battling it--you know, especially when you had a remote control," Godar laughed. "You'd change the channel and then get up, adjust the antenna!" ... Originally posted at News - Digital Media
 6/15/2009 4:07 PM (158d 15h 36m ago)
Sharp's 20-inch AQUOS DX LCD HDTV has a built-in Blu-ray player, no 1080p panel
  Cute Sharp, real cute. Brag about releasing the world's first 20-inch LCD HDTV with a built-in Blu-ray player, but don't even mention to consumers that they won't have the luxury of seeing their flicks in full resolution. For reasons unknown, the latest set in the AQUOS DX range does indeed pack a remarkably convenient integrated BD player, but the 1,366 x 768 resolution makes the whole thing sort of pointless. As Liz Lemon would say: "That's a deal-breaker, ladies." At any rate, folks who snap one up in Japan will also find a digital TV tuner, DVD support, a 1,500:1 contrast ratio and 450 nits of brightness. It'll be available in black (LC-20DX1-B) and white (LC-20DX1-W) for ¥150,000 ($1,593) at the tail end of next month in the Land of the Rising Sun.[Via Engadget German]Gallery: Sharp's 20-inch AQUOS DX LCD HDTV has a built-in Blu-ray player, no 1080p panelFiled under: Displays, HDTV, Home EntertainmentSharp's 20-inch AQUOS DX LCD HDTV has a built-in Blu-ray player, no 1080p panel originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 May 2009 07:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
 5/22/2009 5:05 PM (182d 14h 37m ago)
Sharp's AQUOS D series 10 gets hip with the online kick
  Bargain LCDs are selling like hotcakes, but apparently folks are still buying the higher-end models too. Just a few weeks after announcing its new A series, Sharp is now releasing another new selection of sets, the AQUOS D 10 series. Ranging in size from 32- to 52-inches, the new LCDs have similar specs to the A, including a 1080p resolution, 15,000:1 contrast ratio, a judder-hating 120Hz mode, and the ability to automatically adjust contrast, but will sport one potentially major addition: compatibility with online video content services. Right now streaming seems limited to Yahoo! Japan's online offerings, but if and when these come Stateside here's hoping they have a little Hulu up in there. All are said to be shipping in Japan right now for an undisclosed price. [Via Akihabara News]Filed under: DisplaysSharp's AQUOS D series 10 gets hip with the online kick originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 May 2009 06:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
 5/11/2009 3:40 PM (193d 16h 2m ago)
Bargain hunters make Vizio LCDs most popular in US -- for now
  In these difficult times people are looking to buy what's cheap, a state of mind that Vizio's iSuppli's latest press release isn't ashamed to apply, lauding the company's status as the current most popular brand of LCD television in these United States. It owned a 21.6 percent chunk of the US LCD TV market in the first quarter, up from 13.8 in the quarter before and beat out Samsung to be king of the liquid crystal hill -- largely thanks to prices that were, on average, between $150 and $400 lower than the competition. Kudos to the brand and we hope that it enjoys this moment, because with imports of new sets banned out on bond it must be tough paying an extra $2.50 on each one coming through Customs. Full press release after the break.Update: To be clear: this is actually a press release issued by iSupply talking about Vizio, not by Vizio.Continue reading Bargain hunters make Vizio LCDs most popular in US -- for nowFiled under: Displays, HDTVBargain hunters make Vizio LCDs most popular in US -- for now originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 May 2009 07:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments
 5/08/2009 3:07 PM (196d 16h 35m ago)
Sony debuts connected BRAVIA Z5500 LCD HDTV line
  And the hits just keep on comin'. Shortly after Sony introduced its connected BRAVIA W-Series to the world, in flies yet another trio: the Z5500 line. Arriving in 40-inch, 46-inch and 52-inch models, the set boasts Motionflow 200Hz technology, DLNA certification, the outfit's BRAVIA Engine 3, its own 'draw the LINE' design concept, a 1080p panel and a CI Plus interface, which only those parked overseas will truly understand. Furthermore, there's an integrated MPEG-4/AVC HD tuner, BRAVIA Sync (HDMI-CEC), an auto shut-off function, a dedicated 'Energy Saving Switch' and -- for the first time -- AppliCast. If you're curious, the latter feature enables users to access a range of online services (RSS feeds and all sorts of other widgets) via the built-in Ethernet jack. Sony didn't bother to share a price, release date or any hope of a US debut, but we'll be keeping our eyes peeled.[Via TrustedReviews]Gallery: Sony debuts connected BRAVIA Z5500 LCD HDTV lineFiled under: Displays, HDTV, Home EntertainmentSony debuts connected BRAVIA Z5500 LCD HDTV line originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Apr 2009 08:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
 4/30/2009 3:45 PM (204d 15h 57m ago)
Features, style give Samsung LED TV an edge
 The high-end Samsung UNB7000 series is a looker. (Credit: CNET) As HDTVs become more common--some would say commoditized--TV makers go to ever-greater lengths to justify higher price tags. Nobody is going as far as Samsung this year. The company is the only one thus far to announce a full lineup ...
 4/26/2009 4:41 PM (208d 15h 1m ago)
Panasonic plasma gives great blacks for less
 Although it requires more than a few picture quality tradeoffs, the Panasonic TC-P50X1 delivers the best black-levels-to-dollars ratio of any HDTV we've tested.(Credit: Sarah Tew)The capability of a TV to reproduce a dark shade of black is the number-one criteria for awarding a good picture quality ...
 4/26/2009 4:40 PM (208d 15h 2m ago)
Samsung's 2009 LED-based LCDs with local dimming get detailed
 A replacement for this LN46A950 is coming later this year.(Credit: CNET)Prior to CES, Samsung's reps mentioned in a conversation with CNET that a successor to the company's best 2008 HDTV, the LNA950 series, would be available later in 2009, and now details are beginning to emerge. ...
 4/26/2009 4:38 PM (208d 15h 4m ago)
Wireless Innoviation: Welcome To Your TV's White Space
 The space between the channels on your television is where the future of communication, wireless Internet, and even portable television lives. The potential for these White Spaces is limited only by creativity, ingenuity, and the need for clear rules of the road. The Wireless Innovation Alliance, a coalition of creators, developers, and leaders in technology, urges the FCC to determine and adopt rules that will realize the potential of TV white spaces for us all.
 3/20/2009 5:54 PM (245d 13h 48m ago)
Report: Is Best Buy refusing to match prices?
 Is Best Buy refusing to honor its own price-matching policy?(Credit: BestBuy.com) Web site HDGuru.com has published a report describing three separate visits to Best Buy locations where salespeople refused to comply with the store's own price-matching policy. The report goes on to provide advice to customers ...
 3/18/2009 3:37 AM (248d 4h 5m ago)
OLED market set to skyrocket in 2011, says DisplaySearch
  You've seen the prototypes tucked away in trade show corners, and you've seen the demise of existing generation technologies -- it doesn't take an industry expert to realize that the door is wide open for OLED to walk through. According to a new report from -- who else? -- industry experts, the OLED lighting market is set to boom in 2011, with OLED revenues expected to surpass PMOLED displays in the 2013 / 2014 time frame. Specifically in the OLED TV market, manufacturers are scrambling to assemble large-screen OLED TVs that are even close to affordable, and estimates we've personally heard put those on the market just after the next decade begins. Clearly, the biggest hindrance from OLED domination right now is the prohibitive pricing, but once those XEL-1s are given away inside King Size cereal boxes, we'll really be onto something.Filed under: Displays, HDTVOLED market set to skyrocket in 2011, says DisplaySearch originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 15 Mar 2009 08:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
 3/15/2009 9:26 PM (250d 10h 16m ago)
Panasonic's ultra-thin 54Z1 plasma in the wild
 Now that it's official and priced, Panasonic seems much happier to show off its wireless HD-sporting, ultra-thin Z1 series, and it's quite the sight to behold. The 54Z1 we got to look at was very strikingly clad in brushed metal gray -- compared to the regular black of most of Panasonic's TV lineup -- and of course incredibly thin. The wireless HD receiver box was across the room and working flawlessly, and it was nice to see that the included remote is an RF unit, capable of non-line-of-sight channel changing -- it's starting to feel like the 21st century around here! The plasma picture was of course very good, and we're really feeling those Viera Tools icons across the bottom. $6,000 though? That's your call.
 3/12/2009 11:55 PM (253d 7h 47m ago)
'Plasma's dead. Should I buy plasma?': Ask the Editors
 Is plasma still a safe investment? We say 'yes.'(Credit: Panasonic)Q: "Want to buy a new plasma but don't know that the face of plasma has changed with the withdraw of two of its top players need some advice plasma or LCD?" -- George Carter, via e-mail. A: Well George, personally I think there's no reason to avoid buying plasma just because Pioneer and Vizio dropped out. In case you haven't heard, dear reader, George is referring to announcements by Pioneer and Vizio, two companies from the high end and the low end of the plasma market, respectively. Both will no longer produce plasma TVs. Last week comments by an LG exec sparked speculation that that company was next to drop plasma, although a company press release says otherwise, stating that LG will continue with its 2009 plasma releases, including the PS80 series that we selected as a Best of CES finalist. Despite seemingly dire news for plasma, we expect LG, Samsung and especially Panasonic to sell a lot of plasmas in 2009. And I'll feel perfectly comfortable continuing to recommend people buy them, assuming they score well in reviews. Plasma is not dead yet....
 3/05/2009 5:57 PM (260d 13h 45m ago)
World's sexiest plasma gets ugly price tag: Panasonic Z1 will cost $6,000
 The 1-inch thick Panasonic TC-P54Z1 will list for $5,999.95.(Credit: Panasonic) Our friend Gary Merson, aka the HD Guru, got his hands on some early pricing for certain Panasonic HDTVs--and now he's got some numbers for Panasonic's 1-inch thick plasma, the 54-inch TC-P54Z1. Not surprisingly, the "...
 3/05/2009 5:56 PM (260d 13h 46m ago)
CNET launches HDTV picture settings forum
 We'll tell you where to set the sliders.(Credit: CNET) Today I'm proud to announce the re-launching of one of our most popular services here at CNET Reviews: providing picture settings for HDTVs. Now and for the foreseeable future, HDTV picture settings information will live in its own dedicated forum at CNET, where readers can search for our official settings to apply to their own TVs. The format also allows readers to post their own settings and share advice on HDTV setup in general. Click here to check out the new forum and search for your HDTV. In case you didn't know, I publish the exact picture settings I used my picture quality evaluations and comparisons for every HDTV I review. I arrive at these settings through a formal calibration process, employing high-end equipment and industry-approved methods to adjust the myriad user settings found on today's HDTVs to achieve the best home theater picture for a dark room. The idea of publishing the official CNET picture settings is to allow owners of the TVs I review to try out my settings at home to see if they like the picture. I won't guarantee that everyone will love the look of the picture produced by these settings, but I will say that the image quality, especially from a color accuracy standpoint, nearly always surpasses that of any of the presets built into the HDTVs themselves. But don't take my word for it; try the settings and see for yourself....
 3/05/2009 5:54 PM (260d 13h 48m ago)
Still waiting for OLED TVs
  The Sony XEL-1 OLED TV is a beautiful display. Its contrast ratio makes pictures pop, it's thinner than a credit card, but with an 11-inch screen, it's too small, and at $2,500, too expensive. But it's been a year since it was introduced in January 2008, and as of today, it still has no competitors. Where are they? Though we've been long promised that the era of OLED (organic light-emitting diode) TVs is just around the corner, it appears we're going to have to wait even longer. The major players in electronics who have the resources to build OLED TVs have been whacked by the global financial meltdown along with the rest of us. In other words, the timing to jump-start a brand new TV technology is terrible. A year later, the XEL-1 OLED TV from Sony is the only commercially available.(Credit: Sony) "The cost to manufacture them remains high and will remain high until someone's willing to take the risk to develop their own manufacturing capacity on a large scale," explained Paul Gagnon, TV market analyst for DisplaySearch. "Risky investments are not something most of these companies are looking at right now." Samsung, Sony, LG Electronics, Toshiba, and Panasonic have at various points promised to make OLED TVs. Only one of them, Sony, has done so. But even Sony's is hardly what most people would call a viable option. It's not the standard size of a TV, and isn't exactly priced for a recession. The other firms have only prototypes to show. Fading hope There was some hope that Samsung and Sony would be able to release larger OLED TVs this year. But if they were, they'd have brought them to CES in January in order to stir up excitement for them. That didn't happen. Instead, Sony brought the same 11-inch XEL-1 product that's been available for a year, as well as a 21-inch prototype. Samsung brought out a 40-inch prototype. It's not that OLED is completely impossible to produce. There are a variety of gadgets sporting OLED screens made by these companies, but they're...
 2/20/2009 11:41 PM (273d 8h 1m ago)
Senate Passes Bill to Delay Digital TV Switch: June 12, 2009 is New Date
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Senate passed a bill on Monday to delay the nationwide switch to digital TV signals, giving consumers nearly four more months to prepare.The transition date would move to June 12 from February 17 under the bill that was fueled by worries that viewers are not technically ready for the congressionally-mandated switch-over.It also would allow consumers with expired coupons, available from the government to offset the cost of a $40 converter box, to request new coupons. The government ran out of coupons earlier this month, and about 2.5 million Americans are on a waiting list for them.Senate Commerce Chairman John Rockefeller said delaying the TV switch is the right thing to do because the United States is not yet ready to make the transition."The Senate acted responsibly to give the Obama administration time to attempt to bring order to a mismanaged process," the West Virginia Democrat said in a statement.Many lawmakers worry that an estimated 20 million mostly poor, elderly and rural households are not ready for the switch, which requires owners of older television sets receiving over-the-air signals to buy a converter box or subscribe to cable or satellite TV.
 1/27/2009 1:54 AM (298d 5h 48m ago)
Tips & Techniques
The myth of width: When wide screens don't work
 Please can we keep laptops from getting this wide?(Credit: Philips) The displays of the world are getting wider. For those of us who work, this is not progress. Sure, wide-screen computer screens look cool, but in the real world of working on laptops, a wide-screen display is an ergonomic step backwards. Before I slam the move to wide-screen computers, I will gladly admit that for entertainment content, wide-screen works. Our eyes are side-by-side, after all, and having a story unfold in a way that more closely respects how we see gives a more engrossing, absorbing experience. Wide-screen plasma and LCD television sets make sense, as do CinemaScope movie theaters. But when we have work to do, the fact that our eyes are set up to spot a herd of jackals approaching us over the plain becomes irrelevant. For most people, the world of work is in portrait mode, and wide-screen displays offer scant benefits. Like reading a page of text or a book, most Web sites are set up with strong vertical orientation. That works for text-based material, since wide lines of text, longer than about 60 characters, become hard to read (the reader has a hard time finding the beginning of the next line). ...
 1/30/2009 12:01 AM (295d 7h 41m ago)
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