You make me laugh sometimes Jim.
Laugh it up all you want. But when you're used to expensive things and personal comfort, you won't go back. Atleast I can't.
You always think that the more something costs, then the better it is.
Sometimes it's waste indeed, but sometimes it's truly better. Depends what we're talking about.
it's superb value for money
I don't care about value/quality balance. I want maximum quality, the price is unimportant.
And why did you even buy that Panasonic then? If you care about quality/price thing, you could've got much cheaper model.
I'd be sad if I spent $30k on a TV and it was rubbish.
You think I bought that crap for myself?!
Now you think I'm a total idiot. How sad.
You say it's like buying a Ford Focus, and I agree. Affordable, reliable, great for the money, and not a problem for 99% of the non-elitest people who have one. There's a reason they are one of the most popular cars ever made.
You remind me one of my buddies, who ridiculed me for buying expensive/exotic cars. Until he "borrowed" one of my R/R (without my permission).
Now he's a different man. A car can change you forever, you know. He never went back to his Toyota Landcruiser and Lexus LX 430...
If you think LG is the worst TV available today, you have serious disillusions.
Maybe you're right, Sharp is probably worse.
I love their menus which never save settings!
Think it all depends on the TV models. Have a Samsung LA40M81BDX/XSA, and I have no problem with its black levels... sure they're not the best ever, but as I don't have a fortune to spend on TVs I'm quite happy with it. A friend got another Samsung model and was quite upset over its black levels (he replaced it with another TV model/brand)... meaning even within the same brand, quality varies. Seen it for myself in showrooms as well. And price is not always indicative of quality.
The most people buy '42 TV for no more then 1K$.
At the time of purchase (6years ago I think), the Panasonic had the superior picture - but was out of my budget. And in a side-side comparison with a Sony (at the same price as the Samsung), the Samsung had the superior picture. Size aside, can't say I'm sorry I purchased it - even if it did drop 25% in price a few months later. Am always wondering what a bigger size could do, and then I realise that even a cinema screen at home wouldn't make me happy; yes it'd be bigger, but then I'd need a bigger wall, and I'd need a longer room to sit further back to enjoy it, which would make it comparatively small again (ie further back from screen you are, smaller the screen seems)... There's always a tradeoff.
I'm thinking about ordering a custom '215 screen. Though I'll need to redecorate my biggest hall (not big enough for such screen).
Will cost ALOT, but what the hell...
As for the future, nothing's set in stone yet for new technologies always emerge.
* Laser TV sounded quite promising when announced a few years back, but nothing has been heard since that initial hype.
I have a '55 Mitsubishi. Bought it 4 years ago as I recall. Quality reminds me some old CCFL TVs. Wasted money, I really feel stupid for paying 10K for that turd.
* OLED's blue has issues, but I've also heard that won't rear its ugly head for at least 3000 (or was it 30000?) hours I believe - which is a LOT of TV-on. Guess by the time it expires, one would be ready for an upgrade anyway.
The biggest issues are its price and size. Right now you can get only '55 for ~20K. Is it worth it? Anyway I'll pass for now, though the technology itself is very promising.
* LED/LCD just keeps on going until the unit itself dies... I've worked with LCD monitors that were on for 24hours/365days for at least 15years, and they were still going with no sign of reduced visual quality (except the unforeseen dead-pixel issue).
Cheap LED/LCD monitors actually die quickly. The best are professional NEC LED monitors (current gen), the most reliable and the most expensive. Got 4 of them (~2.5K$ / '30). I know, it's crazy but I need them for my work.
* Projectors would probably be the best solution, but they have the ongoing lamp-replacement cost to consider - and need darker rooms. Their only advantage is obviously the HUGE displays they can create (no need to go to a cinema again, for one can create an IMAX display in their own home).
I've read about one guy who made this monster projector, spent like 2 mil $ on it.
Claims it's the best thing ever.
* Plasmas obviously have the gas-issue, but like OLED blue will take a lot of viewing before having to worry about it.
Good plasma is very reliable, cheap isn't. Been there, done that.
* Then you have spray-able/wrap-able technologies talked about as well...
We also have little green men with guns and cowboy hats who like icecream.
* Perhaps the most future-feasible technology is if Google Glass marries Oculus VR. If both technologies take off (and paired with true 3D-headset sound), they have the potential of a 3D-IMAX-like display right in front of your eyes, without requiring an entire room to enjoy it. One could conceivably watch a film on public transport, in bed, etc without intruding/bothering anyone else... no more fighting over the remote. But THAT is at least 10years away, if indeed it catches on.
I wear glasses when watching movies, and it's pretty bad watching 3D with glasses. Plus 3D technology will really advance only after 2043 (I read this article which totally convinced me). Right now it's just Scar 3D and other crap.
* As for cost... when a few months ago I shoved the Silence Of The Lambs blu into an UHDTV, there was no difference whatsoever. They cost appx U$8K at the time, but looking at the display alone I'd notice not much difference to the HDTV alongside it... And then they switched the UHD to a 576p (TV broadcast) program: !!! QUITE BAD - worse than the same program running on the HDTV next to it !!! Obviously one can only upscale a low-resolution source so much; one could do the same on a HDTV with a (for example) 144p video, and get a similar comparative result. Guess my point is, don't even consider a UHDTV unless you have the UHD content to use it with - else it's a waste of $. And when you consider that even the few blu's at the moment that are mastered-in-4K-but-still-output-1080p (eg MiB) don't even do that, it will take a long while.
2K video on 4K TV it's still a 2K video. Plus video quality gets worse.
Plus we'll need another disk format to fit the 4K content, which is questionable considering all the talk at the moment saying "blu will be the last disk format"...
4K video requires atleast 75 GB disk. But today Blu-ray players don't support such capacity and video resolution.
At the end of the day launching new production for 4K video isn't economically viable whatsoever. It was said and repeated many times.
Also looked at a recent 100inch TV (which I think was based on a rear-projector-like technology), and its contrast levels were quite disappointing. THAT costs appx U$10K if I remember correctly.
Yeah, all colors are crushed and there're some other issues. I was asked to buy that one, but I refused.
Anyway, nice to live in interesting times, where consumers like us can have such discussions and options... Quite a change from, say, even 20 years ago when you only had 2 affordable options (a cinema screen and a CRT) to watch our favourite pastime...
CRT is the best thing ever!