This is what I own . . . XBR Link. If you're serious about your TV, and I'm guessing you are, you'll go with this one. You can probably finance it if you're too poor to buy it outright. Go big or go home.
We looked at that, but there was no way to fit it in our double wide without ripping out the dogs room.Personally, I don't like to squint when I'm standing in the back of the family room, so I went big with our set.
We looked at that, but there was no way to fit it in our double wide without ripping out the dogs room.
I love me some Conspiracy Kitty.Funny TRest. Like the avatar.
Excellent, excellent advice. Personally I have bought a ton of stuff from monoprice.com - just about every cable or adapter under the sun, for very reasonable prices. Terrific experience each time I order there, and they generally arrive sooner than quoted arrival time.My only advice, never buy an HDMI cable from a big box retailer.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-20056502-1/why-all-hdmi-cables-are-the-same/
I'm not sure the type of cable mentioned in the quoted blurb, but if Best Buy will gouge you on HDMI, they are probably gouging you on the other cables you are purchasing. Do your homework on perpipherals too, and then go to newegg.com

my Vizio 47" 240 Hz has great sound... of course a sound bar would make any tv sound BETTERIf you're not setting up a home theater, be careful of Vizio. The sound quality is not good. In fact, I'd recommend getting a speaker bar if you're not going all out with a system.
That's a cute TV - I might put one in the laundry room for the housekeeper to watch while she's ironing my socks. (Not that I ever wear them twice, I just like having her on the payroll.)
Personally, I don't like to squint when I'm standing in the back of the family room, so I went big with our set.
![]()
Personally, I wouldn't be afraid to buy used audio equipment if you can verify it's in good working order. I have a pretty basic 5.1 surround sound system that's 10 years old at this point... probably next to worthless... but, it's set up correctly, and damn can it sound fine. Not high end fine, but good enough for what it is.
Question:
Do I need to have a smart TV if I want to use Apple TV? If not, is there any reason for me to pay up for a smart TV if I plan to use Apple TV in any event? Won't I get all the web-browsing capability from Apple TV, even if I don't have a smart TV?
Thanks.No - just an HD TV.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
Thanks.
I'm amazed at how confusing this TV market is, and how hard it is to find something with only the features I need/want, without paying for things I don't want/need.
So, previously I was thinking I had to have a smart TV. In the size range I'm considering (55" and up), it seems that almost all of the smart TV options come with 3D, among other things I don't want, and the price automatically jumps almost $1,000.oo (or more) for the models I'm considering. If Apple TV only costs $100, and it allows any HDTV to become a smart TV, aren't I better off just looking for the best non-3D, non-smart TV and saving the dough? Just want to make sure I'm not missing some other benefit (besides TV-specific apps that come with certain smart TVs).
I have a vizio 42 inch 1080p res in my bedroom. I know that cable boxes run at only 1080i and i noticed that if you watch a football game in hd it looks a little pixely and not crystal clear. im using hdmi and im problably being picky but this drives me nuts because my blu rays looks so crisp and clear as does my playstation. is this just the norm for all tvs or is there a way to make the picture look better?
Your cable company is compressing the signal. You'd get a better picture watching the game over the air with an antenna.
I'm pretty sure tv isn't broadcast in 1080p. To be honest I think the majority of hd programming is 720p and not even 1080i.
Some day we'll get there!
Btw what tvs are people liking these days? I bought a 55" Samsung about two years ago and I wish I had gotten the comparable model in an LG. I think they look the best.