<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_extra"><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Dec 30, 2014 at 6:10 AM, Ken Truesdale <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:kentruesdale@gmail.com" target="_blank">kentruesdale@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><span class="">> Wrong! (1) I have a gallaxy tab that is a 10” LED TV. (2) Samsung also sell a top end 55” OLED TV (presumably the price premimum for 55” makes it worthwhile where as the price for a 40” is too high to be competitive (yet))<br>
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</span>Well, I would argue that you are using a tablet to watch TV (i.e. television programs) but that as far as a traditional TV (television device) - one that you can set up at a distance and watch from a couch - there is no such thing as LED. And I don't think the O.P. was looking for a 10" tablet to replace his SD TV.<br>
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And as far as OLED, I stated parenthetically in the next paragraph that it wasn't practical. And by practical, I meant practical to afford. The OLED problem as I understand it is one of yield and that causes the manufacturing process to very expensive and that cost is passed on to the buyer. Which either makes it so it is too expensive to be practical (I thought it was LG that released the OLED but maybe it is Samsung - can't remember which) or that the manufacturer doesn't even bother releasing the device to the public yet. Besides, I see LED and OLED as two different concepts but maybe since there is no such thing as an LED TV, you could argue that OLED is the LED for TV - that is just a matter of semantics, though.<br>
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So taken together, where a TV is a traditional box sitting on a cabinet or hung on a wall (and not a tablet) and that OLED is not LED, my original statement stands: there is no such thing as an LED TV. Despite what the labels on the TVs in stores indicate.<br>
<span class="HOEnZb"></span></blockquote><div><br></div><div>Ken, thanks for the tip. I have kept abreast of most of the TV technologies, just haven't yet opted to purchase (I'm a gadget geek with few gadgets...). I'm aware that I won't be getting a true LED TV, just LED backlighting (unless I wait a few more years...!), but I did mention I'd like a "full array" LED for maximum contrast. But LED TV is the term that marketers have co-opted so that was what I used.<br><br>Thanks for the input, everyone. It sounds like there aren't any particular major MythTV-related headaches to avoid (with modern sets anyway) so I'll just snag a good quality set when it goes on sale.<br><br></div><div>Karl<br></div></div></div></div>