Spyke

I hope we're not paying more for a player that does less…

You are and will be, as the cost of hardware in "smart" devices (and the reason that non-smart TV's no longer exist) are subsidized with on-device advertising and massive data collection/reselling.

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HobbitFootreply
thelemmy.club

Yeah. Part of me wonders how much of a premium that making a TV dumb would be and if there is a large enough market that would buy into it.

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lemmy.dbzer0.com

They already exist. You just have to look for "signage displays" or "commercial TV's", they come with all the smart crap stripped out.

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feddit.uk

Iiyama screens are some of the best commercial screens. Unfortunately commercial screens usually lack the plug in and play features on domestic tellys, which can be a right faff

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wewbullreply
feddit.uk

Plug and play features like....

Plug an HDMI cable in and watch?

0

I'd imagine they mean features like HDMI CEC, input-based picture mode memory/adjustment, support for high-quality audio (like Atmos), etc.

2

Not quite; using USB storage, which people do, remembering last input, little things like that which you take for granted on a consumer telly but isn’t easy to use on these commercial screens

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fox2263reply
lemmy.world

Sadly they don’t make OLED signage I don’t think.

2

Yeah, I haven't seen any of that either, probably because OLED burn in and limited brightness lifespan would make them basically unserviceable as static or even slideshow displays.

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thrawnreply
lemmy.world

Why not purchase one subsidized by ads then just not connect it to the internet? Seems like a win-win

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wewbullreply
feddit.uk

...because there's no guarantee it will work without internet.

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thrawnreply
lemmy.world

Can you provide an example of one that only works online? I have never heard of that.

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wewbullreply
feddit.uk

I'm not sure we're there yet, but we're certainly in the "nag banners on a frequent basis" realm on TVs. Not technically unusable, but practically unusable.

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thrawnreply
lemmy.world

Fair, but I don’t think we should want to pay a premium for a dumb TV in fear of a hypothetical future. Perhaps worthwhile if it ever happens, but until then buying a subsidized smart TV and keeping it dumb seems fully better to me.

1

Disagree. You have to vote with your wallet. It's not like the manufactures aren't going to continue down the road they're on. The only thing that will stop them is losing sales because of this crap.

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lemmy.world

My number 1 requirement is being able to disable HDR, my sets don't implement it correctly and HDR content is unwatchable because of it.

The only fix is to disable it on the device as the sets don't have that option.

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lemm.ee

Now I'm genuinely curious: what if you get a super-old and cheap HDMI cable? I'm talking like HDMI 1.2 or 1.4. What are the chances that your tv will be able to process whatever resolution video but not receive enough information to interpret HDR?

Or, it'll likely be more like running gigabit from a cheap router over Cat3 or paired Cat1 where the high frequency generates so much noise on the low-quality unshielded twists of cable that it struggles to assign any standards and you end up with nothing.

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lemm.ee

I think 1.4 does 4K @30Hz. Anyway, I could have sworn most TVs have the ability to turn off HDR, or at least have picture modes incompatible with HDR. Loophole, baby!

2
jordanlundreply
lemmy.world

Yeah, Samsung not so much. The non-HDR picture is vibrant and gorgeous. The HDR is dark, muddy, and unwatchable.

Fortunately all the devices I have feeding them have the option to disable it.

Example:

HDR On:

HDR Off:

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keyezreply
lemmy.world

My LG TV was similar and I had to go digging in the settings to mess with brightness, backlight and black detail. Anything that was dark on HDR was just black and I had to go in and up the black detail and brightness/contrast settings

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Yup, unfortunately with Samsung, the only thing that works reliably is disabling HDR.

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