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Plasma TVs and burn-in
"Adrian C" wrote in message ... Mike Thomas wrote: nospam wrote: "Clive" wrote: I wouldn't bother with power hungry and OLD technology such as Plasma. Tell your mate to get a new LED Samsung TV. Pictures are far better than LCD and way better than Plasma. Samsung 'LED' TVs are LCD. The rest of your comments are similarly accurate. That's cos "Clive" is the Tiscali Idiot. That's right -- this groups *other* personality disordered poster. Interestingly "Clive" was [1] a self-proclaimed expert on OLED domination, and with that "knowledge" would have known the difference ... [1] Has today morphed into "T Williams" posting from eternal-september. The Eternal Tiscali Idiot ... It's funny how there are always misfits, coming and going. The vast majority of people act normally, but the odd one causes all sorts of trouble, or tries to. I suppose newsgroup people are like custormers. I've always said that 99% of people are sane and reasonable . . . but that leaves the other 1% of course. With customers the trick is to sniff out the nutters early, and disengage. With newsgroup people there's no need to sniff them out early, but once they are revealed in their true colours I suppose the best thing is to ignore them. Bill |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Clive wrote: I wouldn't bother with power hungry and OLD technology such as Plasma. Tell your mate to get a new LED Samsung TV. Pictures are far better than LCD and way better than Plasma. Err, the Samsung 'LED' set is still an LCD. And the pictures aren't universally 'better' than other LCD displays. -- *The first rule of holes: If you are in one, stop digging! Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. I wonder if the LED source will remain a truer colour for longer than a fluorescent / cold cathode or whatever? |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
Mike Henry wrote:
Is that before or after OLED (genuine question)? I've been holding out for OLED but then I read about LASER TVs with their much wider gamuts. I'm just holding out until my CRT dies. _Then_ I'll see what is out there! Andy |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
On Aug 5, 8:51*pm, Andy Champ wrote:
Mike Henry wrote: Is that before or after OLED (genuine question)? I've been holding out for OLED but then I read about LASER TVs with their much wider gamuts. I'm just holding out until my CRT dies. *_Then_ I'll see what is out there! Andy My CRT died. I got a Plasma and i'm really happy with it. |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
In article ,
Mike wrote: I'm just holding out until my CRT dies. _Then_ I'll see what is out there! Andy My CRT died. I got a Plasma and i'm really happy with it. My CRT hasn't died, but it's going to a good home. Following the purchase of a flat screen in order to release more space in my living room, the CRT is on Ebay. Astonishingly, bidding started on the first day (even more astonishingly than the fact that bidding started at all actually), so I know I'm going to get more than my advertising costs, and I won't have to suffer the near-physical distress of discarding a perfectly good working telly as rubbish. The only thing that bothers me about the flat screen is that the picture is a fraction of a second behind the sound unless I use the grotty built-in loudspeakers. The delayed audio doesn't seem to be brought out to any external connectors, so I've had to make another purchase of an external audio delay to correct it again. Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
In message en.co.uk,
Roderick Stewart writes In article , Mike wrote: I'm just holding out until my CRT dies. _Then_ I'll see what is out there! Andy My CRT died. I got a Plasma and i'm really happy with it. My CRT hasn't died, but it's going to a good home. Following the purchase of a flat screen in order to release more space in my living room, the CRT is on Ebay. Astonishingly, bidding started on the first day (even more astonishingly than the fact that bidding started at all actually), so I know I'm going to get more than my advertising costs, and I won't have to suffer the near-physical distress of discarding a perfectly good working telly as rubbish. Good man. I have to confess that, at the insistence of my wife, I eventually took a more-or-less perfectly-well-working [1] Sony to the local dump / recycling centre. [1] On pressing the mains on/off button, it very occasionally didn't start up correctly, and required a re-press. The only thing that bothers me about the flat screen is that the picture is a fraction of a second behind the sound unless I use the grotty built-in loudspeakers. The delayed audio doesn't seem to be brought out to any external connectors, so I've had to make another purchase of an external audio delay to correct it again. That's a bad design. If that is a known 'feature', in the set-up menu, I would have expected there to be some on-board adjustment. Care to name and shame? -- Ian |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
In article , Ian Jackson wrote:
The only thing that bothers me about the flat screen is that the picture is a fraction of a second behind the sound unless I use the grotty built-in loudspeakers. The delayed audio doesn't seem to be brought out to any external connectors, so I've had to make another purchase of an external audio delay to correct it again. That's a bad design. If that is a known 'feature', in the set-up menu, I would have expected there to be some on-board adjustment. Care to name and shame? It's one of the new 7000 series Samsung LED-illuminated TVs. It cost an obscene amount of money but looks beautiful on the wall and makes my living room seem twice the size thanks to the absence of the CRT on its floor stand. I expect it to last me a very long time. Currently showing RGB external sourced via SCART as a straight replacement for the CRT, it can apparently also show HD, should I ever decide there are any movies that are worth purchasing a blu-ray player for. As well as the audio ouput from the SCART, there is an optical digital output, but I haven't got anything that can use it so don't know whether this is delayed or undelayed. It baffles me why they would think anyone would want an out of sync audio feed at all. I can deal with this, but it seems daft to have to buy an external delay unit when the necessary electronics is built in, but inaccessible. I don't know if this is the standard arrangement or is special to this TV. Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
Bob Latham wrote:
My Sony CRT died. I got a Sony LCD (oh the shame of it) But I'm really happy with it and prefer it to the CRT. I'm sure I'd prefer a nice big flat set, which the BBC wouldn't insist on feeding cropped pictures. Whether I'd prefer it enough to justify the cost is another matter. And if I wait 'til the last moment I won't feel _quite_ as bad over the new technology that makes my new TV obsolete the next month. :) Andy |
Plasma TVs and burn-in
Alan Pemberton wrote:
The BBC sends cropped pictures? How so? Do you mean in the sense of cropping 21:9-ish films to 16:9, etc? Most 4:3 originals are cropped top-and-bottom to 14:9 for analogue and 16:9 for DTV transmission. I suspect the 14:9 is the middle 14 of the 16, so it's cropped both ways. Andy |
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