I don't see how Android TV is work in progress. Sony did a bad job porting Android TV to their Bravia line in the beginning but I can tell you now that they have definitively improved. I have one of the brand new 2016 Sony's and a Shield Android TV and the Android OS has been great. The fact that it has the playstore and built in Chromecast puts the Android OS far past the others. It also has voice dictation that is far beyond anything you will see from the competition as well. Keep in mind you are getting google's database with Android TV when you are voice searching.
The Android ecosystem is huge and it takes very little effort to get an existing Android phone app to run on Android TV. Also, Android TV apps are written in Java which is better suited for higher performing apps/games unlike the web technologies used for Tizen/WebOS apps. It will have way more app growth than the others because of this.
Here are some pics from my Bravia X850D 55 inch which I just picked up on Bestbuy.com on sale for 1,600. The picture is stunning.
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Im eyeing this beauty myself. You notice any inpit lag?
2015 Sonys have great input lag and Samsung has average?
Wat
Those are near black issues on current lg oled tvs.
https://www.google.fr/search?q=oled...ved=0ahUKEwjU48SCiq_LAhUBMBoKHbkCBNgQ_AUIBigB
You can't do anything about it, some panels are better than others, but it sucks yeah.
2016 lineup is supposed to fix the problem.
Those are near black issues on current lg oled tvs.
https://www.google.fr/search?q=oled...ved=0ahUKEwjU48SCiq_LAhUBMBoKHbkCBNgQ_AUIBigB
You can't do anything about it, some panels are better than others, but it sucks yeah.
2016 lineup is supposed to fix the problem.
I don't see how Android TV is work in progress. Sony did a bad job porting Android TV to their Bravia line in the beginning but I can tell you now that they have definitively improved. I have one of the brand new 2016 Sony's and a Shield Android TV and the Android OS has been great. The fact that it has the playstore and built in Chromecast puts the Android OS far past the others. It also has voice dictation that is far beyond anything you will see from the competition as well. Keep in mind you are getting google's database with Android TV when you are voice searching.
The Android ecosystem is huge and it takes very little effort to get an existing Android phone app to run on Android TV. Also, Android TV apps are written in Java which is better suited for higher performing apps/games unlike the web technologies used for Tizen/WebOS apps. It will have way more app growth than the others because of this.
Here are some pics from my Bravia X850D 55 inch which I just picked up on Bestbuy.com on sale for 1,600. The picture is stunning.
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That's very nice. I might replace the set in my bedroom with one of those. How are the blacks under dim lighting?
So Im pretty new to the modern HDTV scene...been using a Samsung 40 inch720p TV from 2007 up until recently. I also use an older 24 inch Dell 1080P LCD monitor for PC gaming.
Last week I finally got a 55inch 1080p tv...specifically this one (Sony KDL55W800C):
http://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/sony/w800c?uxtv=97b6
I have it hooked to my PC and with the new TV and my old monitor side by side and I still think my older monitor has a better picture. The HDTV looks like slightly more washed out and I notice that black is darker on the HDTV than it is on the monitor (still cant decide if this is a good thing or not).
Basically Im wondering if Im just being really picky or was it crazy to expect a 55inch tv to produce better picture quality than a 24inch PC monitor?
Eh, I finally pulled the trigger. I kept talking about it, and my fiance' told me to just go for it.
Ordered one of the last 40" Samsung JU7500 models that is supposedly about as good as it gets for gaming from Amazon. ~$1300 on a 40" is a tough pill to swallow; but I'm excited nonetheless. I have no doubt it'll be a great TV.
Here's the deal - I wanted smaller than 50". Which pretty much leaves 40" and less. This is pretty much the only flagship model in that size, and it just so happens to be reviewed as one of the absolute best gaming displays you can get. It will be used for games in my small office about 95% of the time; the other 5% will be Netflix/TV for background noise, I imagine.
The plan is to keep this as my primary gaming TV for consoles for the long-term future; probably through the next console generation
Since it wasn't nearly as expensive as a larger flagship, I'll probably upgrade our family room TV in the next year/year and a half. I'd like to do a 60"+ 4K OLED, but want to keep it well optioned and under $2500. I imagine that should be do-able next year.
I don't see how Android TV is work in progress. Sony did a bad job porting Android TV to their Bravia line in the beginning but I can tell you now that they have definitively improved. I have one of the brand new 2016 Sony's and a Shield Android TV and the Android OS has been great. The fact that it has the playstore and built in Chromecast puts the Android OS far past the others. It also has voice dictation that is far beyond anything you will see from the competition as well. Keep in mind you are getting google's database with Android TV when you are voice searching.
The Android ecosystem is huge and it takes very little effort to get an existing Android phone app to run on Android TV. Also, Android TV apps are written in Java which is better suited for higher performing apps/games unlike the web technologies used for Tizen/WebOS apps. It will have way more app growth than the others because of this.
Here are some pics from my Bravia X850D 55 inch which I just picked up on Bestbuy.com on sale for 1,600. The picture is stunning.
![]()
![]()
I don't see how Android TV is work in progress. Sony did a bad job porting Android TV to their Bravia line in the beginning but I can tell you now that they have definitively improved. I have one of the brand new 2016 Sony's and a Shield Android TV and the Android OS has been great. The fact that it has the playstore and built in Chromecast puts the Android OS far past the others. It also has voice dictation that is far beyond anything you will see from the competition as well. Keep in mind you are getting google's database with Android TV when you are voice searching.
The Android ecosystem is huge and it takes very little effort to get an existing Android phone app to run on Android TV. Also, Android TV apps are written in Java which is better suited for higher performing apps/games unlike the web technologies used for Tizen/WebOS apps. It will have way more app growth than the others because of this.
Here are some pics from my Bravia X850D 55 inch which I just picked up on Bestbuy.com on sale for 1,600. The picture is stunning.
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My friend is still looking for his next TV and it's going to be Sony. Do you have any idea what the name of this TV is in Europe?
What nature show are you guys using in those pics for demo material?
Figured out it was because I told it it was a PC input. Why the fuck would you not let me turn on game mode for PC? So, just don't tell it what is what and it'll let you set things as you see fit.
Setting the input to PC automatically puts it into a lower latency mode and turns on 4:4:4 because they know you will need it for PC. So that option is grayed out because it's already on. It's been like this for Samsung sets a long time but I can see why you were concerned.
You can probably get slightly less lag by changing the name of the input to something else and turning on Game mode but you will lose out on 4:4:4 color which is a big deal to a lot of PC gamers.
Walked in a store with the JS8500 (curved) in mind, ready to purchase.
After seeing the awful edge light bleeding in person, which was one of my worst fears, hated it instantly and turned around just to see a beautiful lg 910V, which I believe it's the 9100 in the US (55" full hd oled from 2015).
No 4k tv has impressed me like this full hd tv. Tried P.T. with the lights out and the room would turn pitch black with the only exception of the torch light at the center of the screen.
Blacks look out of this world, can't wait for 4k, 65 inches sets to be more affordable in a few years, because no way I'm going back to lcd or led for my next tv.
Walked in a store with the JS8500 (curved) in mind, ready to purchase.
After seeing the awful edge light bleeding in person, which was one of my worst fears, hated it instantly and turned around just to see a beautiful lg 910V, which I believe it's the 9100 in the US (55" full hd oled from 2015).
No 4k tv has impressed me like this full hd tv. Tried P.T. with the lights out and the room would turn pitch black with the only exception of the torch light at the center of the screen.
Blacks look out of this world, can't wait for 4k, 65 inches sets to be more affordable in a few years, because no way I'm going back to lcd or led for my next tv.
I got the 2015 model which is the x8505c so it should be called x8505d.
1. Every TV is different but I'll post mine since it's also a Vizio, albeit the M series (post from page 266 I believe)edit here it is http://m.neogaf.com/showpost.php?p=187932366I just bought an VIZIO E50-C1.
How are these settings for the gaming mode?
also, is this TV limited range or full rgb?
thanks! shouldnt clear action be set to off, to reduce blur, as it says? for gaming that is1. Every TV is different but I'll post mine since it's also a Vizio, albeit the M series (post from page 266 I believe)edit here it is http://m.neogaf.com/showpost.php?p=187932366
2. Your backlight is so high, lol. Are you playing in a really bright area?
3. Any modern TV is full range
4. Just go with what your eye likes the most though, just make sure you aren't crushing blacks because you could miss a lot of details.
Alright, here are my preferred settings (I like my colors slightly saturated & neutral color temp):
Cable/set top box:
Picture Mode: Calibrated
Auto Brightness Control: High (depends on lighting of room)
Backlight: 40 (depends on lighting of room)
Brightness: 51
Contrast: 50
Color: 55
Tint: 0
Sharpness: 10
"More Picture"
Color Temperature: Computer
Black Detail: Low
Active LED Zones: On
Reduce Judder: 0 (I have the bar completely empty)
Clear action: Off
Reduce noise: Signal noise: High / Block Noise: Medium
Game Low Latency: Off
Picture Size & Position: Normal/Defualt (never changed this)
Film Mode: Auto
Color Space: Auto
Gamma: 2.1
For gaming (Wii U, never tested PS4 on TV)
Picture Mode: Calibrated
Auto Brightness Control: High (depends on lighting of room)
Backlight: 40 (depends on lighting of room)
Brightness: 50
Contrast: 50
Color: 58
Tint: 0
Sharpness: 10
"More Picture"
Color Temperature: Computer
Black Detail: Low
Active LED Zones: On
Reduce Judder: 0 (I have the bar completely empty)
Clear action: Off
Reduce noise: Signal noise: Off (Greyed out) / Block Noise: Off
Game Low Latency: On
Picture Size & Position: Normal/Defualt (never changed this)
Film Mode: Auto
Color Space: Auto
Gamma: 2.4
My gamma is set pretty high because I love the pop BUT it will over saturate all the colors and crush the blacks. I would probably set it at 2.2 if I were to play on that TV again because crushed blacks is a big no no.
Have been in the market for a new TV since around the Holidays. I'm coming from a decent Sony 55" 1080p set that is getting long in the tooth and wanted to sell it while it was still marketable and fund a new set. Obviously, 4k is all over the market right now, but it seems standardization is still in its infancy. Ultra Premium HD is a standard announced earlier this year which, eventually, all 4k sets (ones worth buying anyways) will be spec'd as such. The thing is, NO 4k set sold up until now meets the standard and MAYBE some will meet the standard in '16.
Anybody who bought a set when HD was becoming a thing knows the pain of adapting too early with a 720p set or a 1080i set that was gimped before the market/industry fully adapted to hi-def. A not dissimilar thing is happening now.
So that leaves either buying a 1080p panel that has fully matured in tech and features or buying a 4k panel won't meet the requisite and inevitable standard for 4k.
There are pros and cons either way, and it boils down to how much you might care about lossless media consumption and 1:1 reproduction.
4k content is here. You can stream 4k content, though the bitrate is ~15mbps for it. 4k bluray on the other hand has ~100mbps bitrate and regular bluray ~50mbps. So even with 4k streaming, you are getting immense amount of compression and loss of visual fidelity that's easily outclassed by a bluray on a 1080p tv.
Console gaming is moot on a 4k display. If you are lucky enough to play a game at a 1920x1080 resolution, it's not guaranteed to be 4:1 upscaling. In fact, most of the time it's not and adds compression.
PC gaming is the only thing I can think of where a 4k set, now, is justified. Then again, there are 4k monitors better suited for the task than 4k tv's.
So with that in mind, I purchased a 1080p tv (Sony KDL-55W800C). One that even cost more than other 4k sets of different brands. I wish I would have bought it last year even when 1080p sets still had premium features. At any rate, this will last me at least until 2 points in the future: the advent of a PS5 and the market maturation of Ultra Premium HD.
LOL, I am actually getting rid of my Sony 55W800B today, and replacing it with a Vizio M60-C3 (or m65). I wouldn't spend more than $1500 on a 4K TV today, but at prices less than that, there's not much reason not to. There aren't many 4K sources but 1080p TVs this year are low-end feature-wise. I like my 2014 1080p Sony just fine, but I moved into a house and I need something a bit bigger. Plus I'm moving to an HTPC in my living room (from PS4 as primary media device) and I'll have a 4K source once I do. Going 4K was a no-brainer for me. I wish I could go OLED but it's still not ready yet for the mainstream.
Are there any issues with the Vizio M-series as far as gaming? I know it doesn't do 4:4:4 but I don't care about that, even for HTPC. RTINGS says that it supports 4k@60Hz?
For that price why wouldn't you get a 4K 2015 Sony instead of a Vizio?