Is 4k worth it for $200-$250 more than a 1080P or will it be obsolete? I just dont see this catching on since bandwidth is at a premium but I could be wrong. Thanks much. BP
1080 is bloody awesome! HD kicks butt. Not a single person has looked at a 1080 display and said... man... is that dated or what?! Can you imagine we used to watch television with such poor resolution?Is 4k worth it for $200-$250 more than a 1080P or will it be obsolete? I just dont see this catching on since bandwidth is at a premium but I could be wrong. Thanks much. BP
Agree, buy the M Series 1080p not the 4K.Read articles from places like Cnet and other online resources. You may regret a 4K tv that is only $200 more than a 1080 one for watching cable/satellite or even OTA. As one example, Vizio has a very affordable 4K tv that gets nice ratings with 4K material, BUT not so good for interlaced programming such as 1080I which is the standard today.
Lets see... being sold by Walmart. NO! 4K isn't at the point of being cheap reliably.What about this TV ? www.walmart.com/ip/Hisense-50H7GB1-50-4K-Ultra-HD-2160p-120Hz-LED-Smart-HDTV-4K-x-2K/46009858?action=product_interest&action_type=title&item_id=46009858&placement_id=irs-302-m3&strategy=PWVUB&visitor_id&category=&client_guid=51e80457-57b7-4684-b14b-caac9f00b845&customer_id_enc&config_id=302&parent_item_id=44465836&parent_anchor_item_id=44465836&guid=c7de2765-c072-41c6-9e11-3140d6765c12&bucket_id=irsbucketdefault&beacon_version=1.0.1&findingMethod=p13n
Sent from my Z987 using Tapatalk
Analog C-Band, when did right, offered an excellent picture. It was just nearly as good as HD to me.I liked the old analog TV lol
If the TV has 4k Netflix and Amazon built in then go for it. ALSO make sure the TV has HDMI 2.0a and is HDCP 2.2 compliant. (NOT MANY TVs have this yet)
If it doesn't, you won't be able to EVER connect a UHD Blu-Ray player into it.
ALSO, the 60 mz thing is THAT important unless you want all the soap opera effect you can get. Content comes in a max 60 frames. The TV can show more frames, but it's either going to make up a frame based of the prior and next frames data or, just display the same frame 2 or 4 times. 120hz does have the benefit of being able to output native 1080p24 (24 FPS, show each frame 5 times, you end up at 120) Lesser Hz TVs need to do some processing to make up for this, and the outcome may vary depending on the quality of the image processor.
Modern 60Hz TVs rarely suffer the LCD issues that caused motion blur so the extra refresh rate just isn't important.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2379206,00.asp
Give us the TV models we can better advise you!
(Is this what this forum is for?)
As discussed already, you may very well be disappointed with the cheaper 60/120s. If you can't step up to a higher tier, 120/240, I would not step up at all. Wait another year.Im considering the Samsung JS7000 SUHD in 50" ($799) or the Samsung J6300 in 55" or 50" ($699/ $629) (although I hear the 50 has inferior outsourced panels). All are 60 hz 120 motion rate sets .
What does the One Connect box provide?Ask yourself how long you're going to own the TV. If you buy 1080 now you will miss out on future TV standards, not to mention current streaming content and improved 1080 watching with upconversion. This year Samsung is the safest bet, but spend the money on one with the full One Connect box, not the Mini. One Connect boxes future proof your investment as the UHD standards are finalized. Black Friday offers are out there now.
I checked out the One Connect box in the Samsung site. Looks like a neat feature but I don't think I would use anything it provides or at least I don't now.What does the One Connect box provide?