Cathy can show her mom how to work the Smart TV's remote so she can use the basic functions. The mom can just ignore the other buttons/functions.
But the Smart TV can allow Cathy or another family member (who is tech savvy) to let the mom watch shows/movies from their phones. It can be a good bonding moment.
I'm looking at Coocaa and the 43" smart TV is only P9400 after discount. My Mom only watches cable so I only need to teach her how to go direct to cable
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Another vote for TCL. Solid sya, got a 50" last year for around 20k
Stock (or almost stock) Google TV experience. Apps also just work, I tried installing Steam Link, Plex and Jellyfin players etc.
I lent my dumb TV to my which is exactly the same as her TV but different size and she woke me up because she can't find the cable TV (Nasa Input 3)
I think that's the sign for me to stick with a dumb tv?
There's a 40 inch TCL smart TV pala at Anson's for P12k
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between TCL and DeVant, get the TCL. rebranded lang yan DeVant, not sure kung Hisense ba. also, Google TV na OS ng TCL. yung DeVant, sariling OS yata.
the "good thing" with cheap units,
is that when / if they brake down,
in theory, you shouldn't feel too bad.
i bought that cheap sharp from anson some time ago, at the price you quoted. it's their basic model, and i think buyers are after its basic-ness.
it's still ok.
how old was yours when it conked out?
i have no experience with these "non-traditional" brands, but i have heard good things with TCL.
personally, however, it's sony or other japanese for me, or samsung or LG.
Last edited by dr. d; June 11th, 2024 at 12:16 PM.
our ancient trinitron is still here, in complete, good working order. (well, we had replaced the remote thrice, already...)
but we had since de-throwned it.
the newer flat screen leds/lcds, kasi, offer larger screens yet are considerably less bulky.
it was a mere 25 incher, and we replaced it with a pre-owned 32 inch samsung solid state screen.
back then, a 25 inch crt was already a luxury model, even as today's 32 inch lcd is considered base model.
if your trinitron was working when you put it in storage, you can dust off the dirt and use it, again.
hey! all you need is the AV terminal, so's you can connect it to the cable black box.
Last edited by dr. d; June 12th, 2024 at 04:01 PM.
It was working but since antenna signal on free TV got weak, we just brought it home to Laguna then our caretaker asked for it. This year lang or late last year. It was literally indestructible. I wish they made appliances like that pa.
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The technology in those picture tubes was very robust. The guns that fire electrons at the phosphors are almost indestructible, and the rest of the components are simple enough that you can find substitutes, should an identical replacement part not be available. Burn-in happens at the phosphor layer of the screen.
For LCD TVs the backlight will eventually die, it is after all for older models a fluorescent lamp, and if your TV is sufficiently old I'm sure sourcing the replacement part will become next to impossible. The newer ones with LED backlighting should last longer, if failures do not happen elsewhere.
OLEDs the panel itself degrades as it gets used, leading to screen burn-in. The screen itself might ultimately last longer than LCD TVs, but it might be left with a shadowy reminder of programs past watched.
they would, if the demand was there.
alas, they are significantly more expensive to manufacture nowadays.
it's like vacuum tubes (which is essentially what a CRT or Cathode Ray Tube, is. a huge vacuum tube!).
the march of technology has rendered vacuum tubes essentially obsolete, in the vast majority of applications.
but they are making a fan comeback!
alas, their current prices today are so illogical, only affluent aficionadoes will willingly pay for them.
Last edited by dr. d; June 16th, 2024 at 05:13 PM.
i remember when we were buying a new TV for my famicom back in the late 80's i think. it was sony vs samsung, latter was somewhat new to the market and had a different logo, or maybe it was LG (goldstar at that time), i don't remember too well. ended up getting the sony trinitron which was pretty cool, flat along one axis
i miss the quality and reliability of Sony. i used to have a bunch of sony clie PDAs back when there were no smartphones yet, cybershot U-series and T-series. a sony hdd camcorder w/ night vision, got to make blair witch type videos haha. had a sony-ericsson T68i, mobile internet on your PDA via bt to the phone over super-slow GPRS![]()
what's sony doing these days? i think it's just playstation and cameras![]()