This is a serious question. Most of the mid to high end stores around here have closed, leaving me with the BB, CC and Wally-world options. If I go into any of these stores, I am faced with the wall of TVs, all of which are daisy chained off a single source, all of which are set as hot as possible, and none of which have remotes available. I can't even tell how they are daisy chained because they are hard mounted and the connections are hidden. I suspect it is component off a splitter as the pictures are at least shown in 16:9.
I see heavy edge enhancement, way too much contrast, soft picture detail and a lot of ambient light interference.
How the heck do you choose a set under these conditions? With literally dozens to choose from in any given size, what can the consumer do to figure out which is the best set for his needs? Rely on what the salesman has been told to push that week? Listen to biased BBS or magazine reviews? Buy a couple to take home and bring back?
BB and CC both usually have a single set connected directly to a BluRay player and it usually looks good. But it is also the $6k set. So, how do you compare the 53" $2500 sets from Toshiba, Panasonic, Sony, etc?
I see heavy edge enhancement, way too much contrast, soft picture detail and a lot of ambient light interference.
How the heck do you choose a set under these conditions? With literally dozens to choose from in any given size, what can the consumer do to figure out which is the best set for his needs? Rely on what the salesman has been told to push that week? Listen to biased BBS or magazine reviews? Buy a couple to take home and bring back?
BB and CC both usually have a single set connected directly to a BluRay player and it usually looks good. But it is also the $6k set. So, how do you compare the 53" $2500 sets from Toshiba, Panasonic, Sony, etc?