Introducing Samsung’s 55-inch HDTVs
As LCD TVs grown to be more widespread- - a few would likely state commoditized- - TV makers go to greater lengths to make a case for bigger price tags. It’s only good that the customers find about HDTV reviews to know what are today’s Samsung’s High definition TVs presented. The brand may be the only one thus far to announce the whole lineup of edge- lit LED- based LCDs, which cost a mint yet offer the most most current technology and design you can find- - at least until OLED comes along.
Each model among the three series of Samsung’s edge- lit LED- based LCD lineup measures just 1. 2 inches thick, due to that LED lighting system, which is also responsible for the TVs’ great energy efficiency. Today we shall only focus on the 55- inch models created by Samsung in these series. The Samsung UN55B7000 most likely the middle child when it comes to cost and features of the three; yet, it includes buckets of add- ons, many of them interactive, along with extensive picture adjustments including a cool new tweakable dejudder mode. In spite of this, we stumbled upon many display quality trade- offs caused by the LED system, namely less- than- perfect uniformity and off- angle viewing, along with the backlights’ rather distracting fluctuations. These issues keep the UNB7000 series from earning our highest accolades for performance, but in terms of design and sports, the steeply-priced televisions set a standard that will be tough to beat.
It is also worthy to note that the UNB6000 series, which also produces a 55- inch Samsung UN55B6000, plus the UNB7000 series which is introduced above have many identical elements. Both series are edged in red and are measured just 1. 2 inches deep at its thickest point. The chief disparity between the UNB6000 series and also the more- over-priced UNB7000 models is its interactive capability. The B7000 units have Yahoo Widgets, built- in content, and the capability to stream music, photos, and video from a networked PC. The B6000 models lack those extras, although they do feature Samsung’s InfoLink service, first seen on 2008 TVs.
Last but not least, Samsung named these units “LED TVs, ” but it’s important to bear in mind they’re essentially otherwise normal liquid- crystal screen TVs that use light- emitting diodes as opposed to the conventional fluorescent backlights.
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