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LED TV
In article ,
Laurence Payne wrote: I agree with the previous poster, it shouldn't be difficult to find a better deal than John Lewis. That guarantee certainly isn't "free". It may still be a good deal when you figure in free delivery - if you need it. And the JL extended warranty is pretty comprehensive unlike some others. -- *I went to school to become a wit, only got halfway through. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
LED TV
"Alan" wrote in message ... In message , Tom E wrote The only thing I would suggest is get one with FOXSAT built in for the current and future HD transmissions. Foxsat? Don't you mean Freesat? But why pay an extra premium for a facility that can be easily added with an external box? Freesat has little HD content (one part time BBC channel and bugger all from ITV). A Sky box or a future Freeview box will/may provide better HD coverage. As for John Lewis's 5 year cover - it's not free, it's built into the higher selling price! -- Alan news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk I did mean Freesat and the cup final is in HD today :-) which I shall be enjoying. HD has little content at the moment but things change. Also what is there at this time is good quality....well for me anyway. Someone just might not want that external box and it's good to know they can be purchased as a combined unit.....IMHO. |
LED TV
"R. Mark Clayton" wrote:
"Angela" wrote in message om... We need a new TV as ours has finally died. Having looked around the picture on the new Samsung LED is certainly impressive and the thinness is just incredible. It is however new technology and does cost a bit more than an equivalent size LCD. Do you think it's early days with LED and best avoided in case it turns out to be problematic? We intend to buy from John Lewis to take advantage of their free 5 year guarantee (which has proven useful in the past), but I would be interested to hear from others as to whether you can foresee any problems and whether we should go for it? I have an LED clock bought in 1978. There is a loose contact somewhere, but all the LED segments still work. I have a Casio pocket TV bought in the 90's, which has one red pixel hard on (fine for everything except cricker replays at the match). LCD's are actually a more recent technology and early LCD panels used to fade and leak internally, however post 1985 they have been much better. OLED's are new and MTBF and burn out are a little unknown. Plasma panels fade to 50% brightness after about ten years use. Generally speaking LED's are very reliable with MTBF's at 100k hours plus. OTOH with six million in a screen the standard deviation from this could be significant. IMHO there is no reason not to buy an LED panels and the results are better. You can probably get a cheaper result buying from Richer Sounds and buying their add on five guarantee backed by Domestic and General. OMG too many LED LCD OTOH IMHO :O)) -- Paul (We won't die of devotion) ------------------------------------------------------- Stop and Look http://www.geocities.com/dreamst8me/ |
LED TV
On Sat, 30 May 2009 09:19:10 +0100, Angela wrote:
We need a new TV as ours has finally died. Best to wait until the end of the year when TV with DVB-t2 tuners will start to become available. |
LED TV
"Laurence Payne" wrote in message ...
Does it really matter if it's an inch thinner? I'm inclined to agree. The difference between a TV that's two feet deep and three or four inches is significant and can make a big difference to your lounge [1] but going from 4 inches to 2 is pretty much irrelevant past the initial "ooh , that's thin" moment. [1] though a lot of people have flat panel TVs on a stand in the corner where it takes up as much room as a CRT -- Alex "I laugh in the face of danger , then I hide until it goes away" |
LED TV
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ...
In article , Laurence Payne wrote: I agree with the previous poster, it shouldn't be difficult to find a better deal than John Lewis. That guarantee certainly isn't "free". It may still be a good deal when you figure in free delivery - if you need it. And the JL extended warranty is pretty comprehensive unlike some others. And you can always look for a competitor to price match against. -- Alex "I laugh in the face of danger , then I hide until it goes away" |
LED TV
In article ,
Dr Zoidberg wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Laurence Payne wrote: I agree with the previous poster, it shouldn't be difficult to find a better deal than John Lewis. That guarantee certainly isn't "free". It may still be a good deal when you figure in free delivery - if you need it. And the JL extended warranty is pretty comprehensive unlike some others. And you can always look for a competitor to price match against. IIRC, they won't price match against mail order only places, though. Not surprising given their overheads. -- *Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
LED TV
J G Miller wrote:
: Best to wait until the end of the year when TV with DVB-t2 tuners : will start to become available. On what possible logic????? They will be expensive to start with and many people do NOT use the built-in Freeview tuner at all (with Sky, Virgin etc.) |
LED TV
The dog from that film you saw wrote:
: the only problem i've heard is, at this moment in time they dont have as : many leds as pixels. : this means that when a part of the picture - example a star on a black sky, : is illuminated, there will be a glow around it where the led's light is : coming through. Yes - I would also be interested to learn how many (LCD) pixels each backlight LED illuminates. I did see the Samsung in question a shop and it did look most impressive! |
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