LG to Show World’s Skinniest TV at CES

Skinnylg

Like Mr. Skinny (Mr. Men, 1978, pictured), LG’s upcoming LH95 TV will be almost invisible when viewed side-on (although unlike Mr. Skinny, it doesn’t have a little sticking-out belly).

The LH95 is an LCD model with an LED backlight and a 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio. What is important, though, is the thickness: 24.8mm (0.98"). That’s it: a giant TV, with an almost non-existent profile. LG will be showing it off at CES, so we’ll be taking a look at it there.

LG unveils the world’s slimmest LED LCD TV [Aving]
Mr.Skinny [Wikipedia]





Add to Reddit
Add to Facebook
Add to digg



TV Calibration Trickery — Is Best Buy at It Again?

Calibrate
Apparently professional TV calibration is a raw deal, because it appears Best Buy has to trick customers into paying for it.

To advertise calibration services, Best Buy stacked a supposedly calibrated TV on top of an identical television that wasn’t calibrated. And Best Buy exaggerated the benefits of calibration by using a lower-quality component cable for the bottom television and a higher quality HDMI cable for the TV above, according to a Consumerist reader who says he spotted the trick.

"This disturbed me a bit because nowhere on the display did it mention this fact," said the tipster, in a letter to the Consumerist. "The average consumer would look at the display, see the TVs and think that the only difference between the TVs was the calibration."

This story shortly follows a consumer report from November — also related to Best Buy’s calibration services. In that incident, a customer said Best Buy put two TVs side by side — and the "non-calibrated" TV showed a standard-definition ESPN while the other was set on the high-definition version of the channel.

Photo: Consumerist





Add to Reddit
Add to Facebook
Add to digg



DTV Converter Box Program Next In Line For A Bailout

Converter_box

It’s the season for bailouts and the digital television switch program is the latest to ask for a little help.

Broadcasters are set to switch to digital transmission starting Feb. 17 but many consumers could be left out in the cold as funding for converter box coupons that can make analog TV sets digital-ready could fall short.

"The expected surge in consumer demand for
converter box coupons is occurring and the fact that NTIA now projects it will
have to delay or possibly deny the issuance of converter box coupons to
consumers without additional funding is of great concern," says Congressman Ed Markey in a statement.

Congress may need to "quickly" pass additional funding for the
converter box program in early January, says Markey.

That means up to $330 million more in funding to sustain the converter box coupon program, estimates the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

The coupon program has already been an expensive one. About $1.34 billion has been ear marked so far. 

The converter boxes that can make analog TV sets digital ready can cost up between $40 and $80. But a government-issued $40 coupon (limit of two for each household) can subsidize almost all or most of the cost.

NTIA expects to receive about 60 million coupon requests by March 31, 2009. However, the current level of funding can support only about 50.5 million coupons.

When funding runs out, the program will hold out on issuing further coupons, says the agency. "NTIA realizes that this would likely result in consumer confusion and dissatisfaction with the program," it said in a letter to Congressman Markey.

There are an estimated 300 million TVs in the U.S., of which about 70 million use antennas and require a converter box to switch to DTV. Till date, nearly 43 million converter box coupons have been distributed.

But some analysts such as Scott Wallsten, senior fellow at the think-tank Technology Policy Institute, say the additional funding is a drag.

"All that the coupon program has done is it has set a floor on the price of the boxes," he says. "The best thing to happen will be for it to go away, in which case prices of the converter box will fall."

Wallsten estimates that converter boxes could be $20 to $35 cheaper than their current prices if there was no coupon subsidy and that the current structure is tilted to benefit retailers rather than consumers. 

Still Congress may well agree to the additional funds, says Wallsten.

"The real reason for this program is because Congress is terrified that their constituents will wake up on Feb. 17 to find their TV not working and complain," he says. "If Congress thinks $330 million will stop the complaining they will fund it." 

Photo: Converter Box (trekkyandy/Flickr)





Add to Reddit
Add to Facebook
Add to digg



ESPN’s Sports Guy Picks DirecTV ‘Idiot Box’ as Best Christmas Gadget

Satgo_1
ESPN’s Sports Guy, columnist Bill Simmons, recently picked the DirectTV Sat-Go portable satellite TV as his top pick of available Christmas gadgets for men.

Judging by the other possibilities that can easily replace the Sat-Go at a cheaper price, we think Mr. Simmons should have consulted his own VP of Common Sense before making such a recommendation.

The DirectTV Satellite-to-Go is an all-in-one rig that comes packed with a 17-inch LCD, a DirectTV receiver and antenna, and folds into a single briefcase. The idea of the gadget is actually quite great if you want DirectTV available to you at all times, especially during stadium tailgate parties before a game.

But it has two huge negatives that make it impossible to recommend: The rig is almost thirty lbs. (27.2 to be exact), and costs $1000. I’m the owner of a 10 lb., 17-inch laptop and I can hardly use it as a portable device without hurting my back, and I’m healthy. I can’t imagine carrying something three times as heavy more than a few times a year.

Espn_red_logo_large
This brings me to the other reason why it’s a bad choice: The Sat-Go is a mainly a tailgate gadget and unless you tailgate every weekend, the price isn’t worth it. You can get the biggest monster package DirectTV offers (over 200 channels in high-def) for about $500 a year, and then use a Sling (~ $200) to send the signal over to your laptop anywhere in the world. And you won’t have to pay your physical therapist and you’ll be able to surf the web as well.

255pxbill_simmons_by_david_shankbon
If you’re a huge NBA or NFL fan, you can also pick up nice subscription plans that allow you to see every single game you want on your laptop while traveling. The NBA’s League Pass Broadband gives you 900 games a season for only $100, is PC and Mac compatible, and won’t take up too much of your computer’s memory.

So waybe if the Sat-Go was an all-in-one PC, with a slide out keyboard, I might think about . . .  nah, I still wouldn’t get it.

Thankfully, Simmons didn’t blow it completely with his full Christmas wish list. He also picked the Netflix Roku Player (one of Wired’s favorites this year), cheap Blu-ray players (from $200-250), the complete set of The Wire ($140), and some quality books like Steve Martin’s Born Standing Up (~$15).

For those not familiar with Simmons, he is known mainly for an irreverent comedy style that mixes detailed Boston homerism with strange shorthand memes. Such memes include the VP of Common Sense (with the idea that the average fan can make better management decisions than closed-off executives), and The (Mike) Tyson Zone (when someone reaches a status of such absurdity that anything they decide to do, like hatching purple baby dinosaurs, is deemed ultimately possible). Michael Jackson and Britney Spears are other characters in the Tyson Zone.

So maybe Simmons will give us a call next year before adding gadgets to his Christmas wish list. That way, we’ll save the poor housewives of America from giving their husbands a wholly unnecessary item. What do you say Bill?

In the meantime, I’m going to spend the Christmas holiday making irreverent predictions about sports. Here’s one: In 2009, no one will watch the N.E. Patriots or the Boston Celtics win a championship on a DirectTV Sat-Go.

B.S. Photo: David Shankbone/Wikipedia

See also:

Gadget Lab 2.0: Jose Fermoso’s Twitter feed; Gadget Lab on Facebook.





Add to Reddit
Add to Facebook
Add to digg