My 6 year old Sony TVs stopped running current apps a couple of years ago.
My qualifier was past 3 to 5 years… prior to that, smart TVs were in their infancy, and OEMs were doing their own thing for lack of any standards or market leading devices with an operating system that they could license. Today, the market has pretty much converged on three platforms, Samsung, LG, and Roku, each with about 30% market share. Android and Apple pick up the rest. Because of external devices, Roku and Apple over perform for what is actually used, but I wouldn’t bet on the external device market long term, aside from the fact that a TV has a life of over 10 years. Although most people with a TV already have devices, and why by a Roku to use on a TV with built-in Roku?
Google and Netflix have already indicated required AV1 support is forthcoming, and very few SoCs support it in silicon. A handful can support it in software, but most of them are not in Sony or anyone else's TVs.
My iPhone only has 2 cameras. The newer ones have 3. A third camera is not a feature that is driving me to a new iPhone. I’m also not planning to pay YouTube TV for 4K despite the fact that my Apple TV and TVs support it. All these older devices still work.
So, it may not be supported, but that doesn’t mean the current devices are going to stop working anytime soon.
People that want AV1 support will need new devices.
How is your 2015 HP Laptop gonna do with Windows 11 BTW?
Early beta or when released this fall? I can understand them wanting to limit hardware on an initial beta release. It’s much easier to test a limited hardware pool and expand from there.
My laptop supports TPM 2.0, but has an older processor. I expect the list of supported processors to grow. My 6th gen i7 was used in newer machines. There is no technical reason my processor can’t run Windows 11. There is already a backlash against Microsoft for the current list. There is no reason to believe it won’t be added in a future release.
Edit to say my 2015 HP laptop is now running Windows 11. I had been on the developers ring with Windows Insider, the health check said the processor was an issue. Apparently that’s not the case anymore.
Obsolescence is a fact of life. Yes, hardware is now good enough that the life of "smart" features in products like TVs is longer than it used to be, but time and technology march on.
You are confusing outdated with nonfunctional. There are plenty of outdated items that are still useful. Technology may march on, but that doesn’t mean it leaves everything by the side of the road. In most areas, the next generation product adds very little.
We are at a point where the added features in next gen products don’t offer value to justify the cost of updating to a lot of people.
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