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Is this a smart TV ?? Can it record and video you ? In the market for a new TV and hearing that they do. Is that true ? Thanks.
If you have an Apple TV and an iPhone can do some fun tricks for calibration the picture.https://www.macworld.com/article/344476/iphone-apple-tv-color-balance-calibration-how-to.html
Hi Larry,Picked up the Samsung today and just got it set up with the help of Samsung. I haven’t tried to tweak or optimize it…wouldn’t know how to do that. I like the picture and the much smaller remote than my previous 2015 Samsung. I am already controlling the TV via the Apple TV box. Did not need to set up the Apple TV box again. It just automatically mated with the new Samsung.If you have any suggestions about optimizing any functions, pls let me know. Nick
Awesome to hear! Was it easy to use the iPhone for calibration duties?
It may have been covered earlier, but the iPhone is calibrating just the color on its HDMI output to the TV, so other devices using other HDMI inputs will not benefit from the iPhone/Apple TV calibration.There are also settings that the Apple TV calibration can't affect. A few test patterns on a USB stick would allow you to adjust the white level, black level, backlighting, color space, and other settings to achieve a basic calibration of the panel. The Apple TV provides fine-tuning color adjustments for the video that it sends to the TV.I'm sure it looks great, however, so additional tweaking could be superfluous.
After several late model expensive TV failures ( just out of warranty ) I've decided to go cheap from now on. I can buy several cheap Chinese TV's for the price of a single Sony or Samsung. TV's are now throw away items as the price of repair often exceeds the price of a replacement. Twice over the last few years I've taken TV's to a repair shop only to pay $100 for a diagnosis in which the technician explained that the repair would cost more than a new TV.
NY Times Wirecutter has an updated list (although some picks are from 2022), unfortunately it costs money to read. Picture quality can actually be measured (unlike audio) so their recommendations are only a starting point. Lots more info in the reviews and comments section regarding brightness, motion blur, etc.The Best TVsUpdated July 21, 2023We’ve spent hundreds of hours researching and testing TVs to find the best choices for any budget and room size. See all our top picks here.https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/reviews/best-tv/The Wirecutter recommendations in a nutshell:Hisense U8H sports all of the advanced TV technologies we like to see—quantum dots for richer color saturation, a mini-LED backlight with local dimming for better black levels and overall contrast, and a 120 Hz refresh rate for improved motion. Hisense’s video processing isn’t up to the standards of Sony or Samsung, so the more eagle-eyed videophile might notice banding and upscaling artifacts in some video and gaming content.TCL 5-Series (S555) delivers a great-looking 4K HDR picture with better brightness capabilities than the competition, and it comes in 50-, 55-, 65-, and 75-inch sizes to fit most rooms. It’s the company’s lowest-priced TV line to incorporate advanced LCD technologies such as a full-array local-dimming LED backlight for improved image contrast and quantum dots for richer color, and it supports Dolby Vision HDR and the latest advanced gaming features. The 5-Series’s panel has only a 60 Hz refresh rate, so motion isn’t as fluid as it can be on a 120 Hz panel, which offers faster pixel refresh and reduced motion blur.Samsung S95B employs QD-OLED, a new technology in 2022 that combines the best qualities of OLED TVs—perfect black levels, wide viewing angles, and a super-sleek design—with the color-enhancing power of quantum dots. No support for the Dolby Vision HDR format.The Best 4K TV on a Budgethttps://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/reviews/best-4k-tv/TCL 5-Series Roku TV (S555) continues the tradition of the company’s previous 5-Series models, delivering advanced TV tech that ensures a great picture for a reasonable price. It’s brighter than similarly priced models, though not as bright as a premium LCD TV. This TV supports the latest AV formats, including HDR10+ and Dolby Vision for high dynamic range and Dolby Atmos for spatial audio, and it offers a snappy and intuitive smart-TV experience via the built-in Roku platform. This TV is limited to a 60 Hz refresh rate (rather than the 120 Hz found on pricier TVs).Hisense’s U6H Series Google TV checks the right boxes: This series offers the same advanced tech as our top pick and produces a good-looking picture overall. But in our comparative testing, the U6H fell short of our top pick in overall brightness and its ability to show fine shadow details in darker movie scenes. That said, you might prefer this TV to the TCL 5-Series if you’re gaga for Google—and especially if you’d prefer to have Filmmaker Mode, a picture mode tuned for maximum accuracy (and one that the 5-Series lacks). If, however, you want a TV that looks good across a variety of lighting conditions, keep in mind that the Hisense U6H lacks the backlight power to perform its best in a bright room.What do I watch? A 60" Panasonic Plasma. If you have ever watched a movie on one you know why.
So plasma continues to be the gold standard for video quality?
Yes, it’s a smart TV. I believe most are nowadays. I am assuming that a good hacker might have the capability to invade my privacy via the internet, microphone or camera …. if there is one. Within reason, I do what I can to protect my privacy.
I think so but the TV has fewer features that some cannot live without. I paid less than $1000 11 years ago.The resolution is only 1080p. The Panasonic accepts 2160p and down samples internally. The 2160p picture can still look better than 1080p for technical reasons. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfnpzPVvQAE No HDR or Dolby Vision but it doesn't need those features because blacks are really true blacks. Plasma TVs powers each sub-pixel individually, so you get a realistic image with a large contrast. If part of the screen has to be dark, the television won't power those sub-pixels anymore. Black is really black. A plasma television displays movements fluently, so the image looks natural. Not a Smart TV. I use a high powered computer with all the apps needed for film, streaming, YouTube, PBS streaming, etc. The computer is hardwired via HDMI to an Anthem AVM60 processor for 7.1.4 surround sound.