No.
Viruses are 'logical errors' which cause data corruption or malfunction. A Plasma Television has no logical chips which store data that is commonly called on, and lacks a full-capability processor. Thus, it cannot 'run' a virus, much less store it.
Most viruses are for x86 based computers, anyway.
Video board is bad, there is a separate board operating the inputs to the computer called the digital board.
There is no difference the only thing is plasma is in a TV in plasma screen TV and plasma is outside of the TV in the state or matter.
Yes, with the right video output card or adapter on your computer. It depends on the card your computer has in it and what type of outputs it has as well as the available inputs of your TV.
yes
HD plasma screens are available on computers. You can hook your computer to the TV via the HDMI port, so that your blu ray drive in your player has the full resolution.
Installation should always be done by a professional. The wall mount for the Plasma tv is not meant for a computer screen.
No, the plasma in blister is the term in biology and is the fluid medium of the blood. The plasma in a television is the term in physics and is ionized gas in plasma state.
Gateway currently does not sell Plasma TVs. They sell full HD computer monitors that you can hook up via an HDMI cable, so it's almost the same thing though.
A JVC plasma is a brand of television and a plasma television does not use liquid crystal displays (which is and LCD television). Plasma televisions are thinner and provide crisper images.
For PLASMA tv and lights
The difference between a plasma and widescreen lcd tv is that a plasma has less of a viewing range. They both have great video quality.
Yes Plasma TV are more expensive then LED as you will get more features with Plasma TV