07-08-2022, 10:33 AM
(07-07-2022, 06:46 PM)Luvnit2 Wrote: I Don't want to fight with you, but I have Xfinity, Netflix, Apple TV +, Prime and Hulu all for around $120 a month with access to buy movies. We stream a lot. We stream on our laptops and project it on the 8K TV with 4K also.
My kids in Cincy stream everything and don't have cable or dish network. Like me, they have extremely fast internet systems so streaming is seamless for 5 people streaming 5 different things.
The new TV's have Netflix and the streaming networks built right in and can be accessed by voice command. 4K is great, far better than just HD.
You are discussing maximum resolution.... There is MUCH MUCH more to image quality than maximum resolution. Much like their is more to high performance vehicles than maximum horse power.
Screen size, seating distance, and the actual technology in the panel have more to do with image quality than maximum resolution.
Some basic model Panasonic 1080P plasma displays still have spectacular image quality even when A/B'd to the newest 4K orceven 8k OLED panels.
I have been in the AV industry since 2019 and owned an integration firm since 2006. I'm a dealer of Sony, LG, Samsung, Hisense, JVC.. and on and on and have done many trainings with these companies and have also given many trainings to AV companies.
There is a lot going on in these televisions that matter more than max res. I can name the bigest ones: Diming zone, aperture speed (on a PJ), pixel shift (or not), how many segments a color wheel has (DLP PJ), trimode laser or single (pj), ambient light tech, panel type (LG uses one type, Sony/Samsung another), color saturation, grey scale, motion processing and speed...... That list goes on and on and on where thise things allllll trump maximum resolution.
Now, where you do have a leg to stand on here is that the newest sets with the newest/best tech (plasma being excluded because it is a dead tech and was killed off for reasons other than performance) DO have the highest resolution AND the most cutting edge panel tech. So, in that sense, you're right.... Bleeding edge tech will typically have the highest picture quality. But that is more to do with how the picture is implemented and not the max resolution. Especially on TVs where the screens are so small since most are under 120".