Oh, ok I will see what happens. I’m on the 100mbps plan so there is a chance they may push for it.
It’s up to you to ask for it and the answer should be yes. They won’t do it automatically without you requesting it.
Nvidia plunged nearly 17% or US$24.20 to close at US$118.42 on Monday.
the Pebble was my first smartwatch, and even though I love my Apple Watch these days, I will always have a soft spot for Pebble
wouldn’t mind getting one for sure
CNN analysis on DeepSeek’s newest AI model
The TV tech seems to be slowing somewhat… I remember reading 5 years or so ago that TVs would become foldable and/or you could ‘roll up’ TV screens and carry them with you. Still haven’t heard anything more on those in a more widely available form.
Am thinking about getting an OLED TV, but am reading that they are not as bright as LEDs and can suffer from burn in issues (like the old plasmas).
The Samsung S25 range went on sale yesterday. Another area where tech seems to be slowing, each new phone from Apple or Samsung seems to be more evolutionary each year. This one looks to be more of the same.
Is this LG briefcase actually a TV? Or just a screen?. Even LG describe it as a “portable smart touch screen”.
Checking into it, there is no tuner included (or antenna) so it is only a TV in the sense that it has smart channels, that would not be easily available in the scenarios discussed in the review.
Also note that the unit was released in 2023.
They can seem not as bright because if the tv has a intelligent feature. I got a Samsung Oled last year and I find its good but the intelligent feature can dull the brightness a lot. If you just have it on Dynamic then it is alot brighter.
Good to know… are you happy with it? Which model did you get?
I’m tossing up between Samsung, LG and Sony.
QN90C Neo QLED . Sorry my bad lol its a Qled not a Oled. Its good but it does take a while to get use to. I’m not to sure about the LG tv’s. But I know with the Samsung high end models they come with AI that you can turn on or off.
essentiallyif you turn it on when you first get the tv what it is doing is working out the brightness off the room and then works out its own settings from there.
The one I have has this but its slightly older. I have it on but you can still make adjustments which is good. I’m not to sure wether the newer model lets you do that.
Thanks, yes my current TV is a 2017 model 55 inch Sony X90E, a very good TV, has Google Android TV built in which still works. Still looks a good picture to my eyes too.
Though it’s over 7 years old now, I think it’s the longest I’ve kept a TV for, which is what got me thinking about updating. Will probably go for a 65 inch this time, to help make the upgrade more worthwhile.
The tv I had before this was a Samsung LED 2017 but the screen suddenly started dyeing last year so I thought stuff it. That was the only reason I got it. If my tv wasn’t about to die, I would have never got it. TBH I would just wait as long as possible because there will always be something better coming out.
Though I think the technology now has plateaued somewhat … from year to year, there just now seems to be small incremental advancements in things like picture quality.
Micro LED TVs have been touted as the next big thing, but have been promised since 2018, the main issue is that it’s still too expensive to make in large numbers for mass market consumption… The smallest available version, a Samsung 76 inch model, costs $90,000. It’s been said that it will be in the 2030s before Micro LEDs supplant OLEDs as the best picture quality you can get in a mass market consumer level TV.
Choice magazine did a TV comparison last month for sports viewing and they said “OLED is definitely the MVP for watching sport”