A British company has created the world’s biggest TV, leapfrogging the previous champ by almost 20 feet. The Zeus, from Titan Screens, measures a full 370 inches diagonally — and costs well over a million bucks.
The number doesn’t give an adequate estimation of the screen’s size, though. Think about it this way: Picture an elephant. Then picture another elephant standing next to that one. Then picture two more elephants balanced on those elephants’ backs. That’s about the size we’re talking about.
Of course, there’s no factory in the world that can pump out elephant-sized TVs. Titan puts each one together by hand — on site. “Our technology is designed around inter-connecting panels,” explained Anthony Ganjou, Titan’s CEO, in an email to NBC News. “Every install we do is different, as these do not fit in most rooms.”
Essentially each Titan TV is made by stitching together several smaller (but still gigantic) screens — which may sound like cheating, but it’s the end result that matters, and if it looks like a single screen, that’s that. Unfortunately, there are no photos of a Zeus in action to make sure, though one will be mounted to a rooftop in Cannes, France, soon to show the World Cup.
A Zeus costs 1 million pounds, or around $1.6 million US — though more modestly sized TVs can be had for just a few hundred thousand dollars.
Naturally, million-dollar TVs are something of a niche product. They’ve only made four of the 370-inchers, but have already sold two. As you might expect, the company’s clientele tend toward the ostentatious.
“Recently we had an inquiry from a client to work out a way to mount a Titan onto his ceiling, dropping vertically in free space,” Ganjou said.
As for the world record, the company isn’t pursuing it actively. “This isn’t a gimmick product,” Ganjou explained. “That being said,” he continued, “if a client requested an official certificate for their wall we would obviously arrange for an adjudicator to judge the TV in situ, and make it official, free of charge.”
Got a million bucks burning a hole in your pocket? Titan can have one of their remaining Zeus-class TVs in your living room, yard or amphitheater within three weeks.
source: nbcnews.com