February 2nd, 2009

The Super Bowl economic stimulus should result in 2.6 million HDTV sold

The Super Bowl is a major economic force and should cause 2.6 million HDTVs sold this year – or so says the CEA. After all, it is the biggest football game of the year and people love an excuse to gather. No doubt some used the digital switch or so-called liquidation sales as an excuse to plop down money on a swanky new HDTV. → Read More

January 28th, 2009

Tip: Buying new HDTVs for inmates right before the Super Bowl makes people mad

The Boston Herald is reporting that, here in my home state of Massachusetts, “The cash-strapped and over-crowded prison system spent a mind-boggling $76,958” on 117 new flat-screen HDTVs. → Read More

January 25th, 2009

Best Buy's 32-inch 1080p HDTV & 80GB PS3 combo for $1,1000 is better than nothing (but only just)

It’s not quite a price cut, but it’s the next best thing. Walk into your local Best Buy and you should be able to pick up a 32-inch 1080o Sony Bravia and an 80GB PS3 for $1,100. That’s about $300 less than you’d pay for the two items separately. → Read More

January 20th, 2009

LG's new TVs claim 1,000,000,000:1 contrast ratio

That’s a lot of… brightness. Or darkness. I’m not sure. Either way, I think there must be something wrong with the scale if LG can just increase contrast by a factor of 10. To be honest, I’m thinking it’s along the lines of the many Hz measure, which many TV makers are taking seriously these days. 120Hz? 240Hz? 600Hz like this one? Your eye can only really detect maybe 120. And the billion-to-one contrast ratio — if your numbers are in the billions, your number has ceased being useful. If, except for a minor “I guess that one looks a little better,” the average consumer cannot tell the difference between 10,000:1 and 100,000:1 contrast ratio, there’s something fishy going on. → Read More

January 16th, 2009

News flash: You had better have decent eyesight if you want to fully appreciate HDTV

The Daily Mail (now home to the best sports columnist writing in the English language, Martin Samuel) has a healthy reminder for those of you about to take the plunge into high-definition: be sure to have your vision checked. Vision Express, an optometry chain in the UK, found that 60 percent of Britons haven’t had an eye exam in the past two years—breaking that number down a bit, as much as 79 percent of Scots haven’t see the ol’ eye doctor in two years. This matters to us because even a slight vision deficiency can prevent you from fully appreciating HDTV in all its glory. → Read More

January 12th, 2009

3D movies won't save Hollywood, nor convince us to ditch our HDTVs for movie theaters

3D movie technology, as it stands, is a load of go-nowhere rubbish. If Hollywood thinks that the tech will convince moviegoers to leave the comfort of their homes, filled with HDTVs and Blu-ray (or upscaled DVDs), it’s got another thing coming. → Read More

January 11th, 2009

Europe turns crosshairs on energy inefficient TVs (read: plasmas)

Ha! The green-crazy European Union is looking to ban energy inefficient TVs, including large plasmas, in the interest of saving Mother Earth. Nope, not joking. → Read More

January 7th, 2009

You'll be able to mount this Samsung Blu-ray player on your wall

Let’s strip this information of all unnecessary fluff. Samsung makes Blu-ray players, among other things. Its “big one” this year is actually two models, the BD-P4600 (above) and BD-P3600. You can mount the BD-P4600 on your wall, and the BD-P3600 is the top-end traditional set-top model. Have a peach.

Update: Live pics after the jump. → Read More

January 5th, 2009

No, really, 2009 will be the year of Blu-ray (maybe)

Oh, Blu-ray. Is this your year—wasn’t last year supposed to be your year?—or will you wallow in relative obscurity while the world falls apart all around you? → Read More

January 5th, 2009

Netflix streaming comes to LG TV this spring: Instant movies, no messy set-top box required

Just a few weeks ago we were all excited to see Netflix streaming makes its way to the Xbox 360 and Series 3 TiVos. Ha, that’s already obsolete, as LG plans to release a TV with the service built-in. And yes, this is the first deal of its kind. → Read More

January 5th, 2009

New California energy regulations would remove certain plasmas, LCDs from store shelves

Looks like California is doing everything in its power to destroy the consumer electronics industry. That is to say a batch of newly proposed regulations would bar retailers from stocking energy inefficient TVs. The worst offenders? Plasma TVs, the kind popularized by very talented singers and athletes on shows like MTV Cribs. → Read More

December 29th, 2008

HDMI/Component trickery at Best Buy


As I recall we had an issue a few months back with another big box store but someone just caught Best Buy also using HDMI cables and comparing them to component cables. Consumerist just found another example. While this is obviously a massive fraud it might have been the only way the Best Buy folks could think to stream the same signal from the Blu-Ray player to both TVs – besides, obviously, using two Blu-Ray players. → Read More

December 20th, 2008

Street Fighter IV special edition rocks your world: The game, HD anime movie, figurine & more

Good God, the $80 special edition of Street Fighter IV is absolutely tremendous. → Read More

December 15th, 2008

Video: Joe The Plumber explains how to install a DTV converter box

Oh God, yes! Velocitystore.com has released the second video featuring America’s favorite person from one month ago, Joe The Plumber. It’s so great, I’m literally ready for a pap smear. “Joe” unboxes a DTV converter then installs it on a terrible TV. This is more absurd than anything else. Factual, but still absurd. Remember, everyone, apply, buy and try! → Read More

December 15th, 2008

Sony to close its last American TV plant by 2010

The last Sony TV manufacturing plant in the U.S. will cease production by February 2009, closing completely one year later. It’s located in Westmoreland County in southwestern Pennsylvania, and some 560 people are expected to lose their jobs. A manufacturing facility in Mexico will supply the U.S. with Sony TVs following Westmoreland’s closure. This is part of the huge restructuring that Sony announced several days ago. Changing market conditions, people losing their houses, etc. Rotten news all around. → Read More

December 10th, 2008

Yay? Blu-ray recorders now more popular than DVD recorders in Japan

Blu-ray is now officially more popular than plain ol’ DVD in Japan. Wait, let me rephrase that: there are now more Blu-ray disc recorders in Japan than there are DVD recorders. More than 50 percent of disc recorders in Japan are now of the Blu-ray variety. → Read More

December 10th, 2008

Buying a cheap HDTV could cost you in the long run, says home theater specialists

→ Read More

December 5th, 2008

CrunchDeals: Costco offering 2-for-1 LCD HDTVs as low as $1200

→ Read More

November 29th, 2008

Every time you buy an HDTV an angel gets its wings (or the economy is saved, one of those)

How were the crowds at your local Best Buy, Circuit City and PC Richards yesterday? Good? Great? Grim? (My local Best Buy was pretty crowded yesterday, to say nothing of the mall itself; parking space was at a premium.) To be sure, if there’s one item these retailers hope to sell this holiday season it’s HDTVs. Lots of them, preferably. Like it or not, but HDTVs have become the great bellwether for this terrible economy: if retailers can sell a few of them all may not be lost. But if Best Buy & Co. has boxes upon boxes of them stored “in the back” it could be a sign that consumers are hoarding cash and aren’t going to spend their way out of this recession. Then we’re reduced to fighting each other with pointy sticks. → Read More

November 24th, 2008

Study: 18% of people can't tell if they're watching true HDTV content or not

Well this is shocking news. Apparently some 18 percent of HDTV owners can’t tell the difference between high-def programming and standard-def programing when viewed on their screens. That’s what Leichtman Research Group concludes based on a survey of 1,302 households. That’s a telephone survey, mind you; there’s some controversy surrounding that type of poll these days. → Read More

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