High Definition LCD TVs

High Definition LCD TVs

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Samsung UN55B6000VFXZA 55 Inch 1080p 120Hz LED HDTV

November 23rd, 2009 · Electronics

Samsung UN55B6000VFXZA 55 Inch 1080p 120Hz LED HDTV



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Samsung SGH A737 Standard Red LED Wall AC Home Charger SGHA737

November 23rd, 2009 · Electronics

Samsung SGH A737 Standard Red LED Wall AC Home Charger SGHA737



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Samsung SPH A900 Standard Red LED Wall AC Home Charger

November 23rd, 2009 · Electronics

Samsung SPH A900 Standard Red LED Wall AC Home Charger




This very reasonably priced standard wall charger for your LG VX-8560 Chocolate 3 phone will allow you to correctly charge your phone as your original charger did, but at a fraction of the price. See details above.

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Samsung SPH M500 Standard Red LED Wall AC Home Charger

November 23rd, 2009 · Electronics

Samsung SPH M500 Standard Red LED Wall AC Home Charger




This very reasonably priced standard wall charger for your LG VX-8560 Chocolate 3 phone will allow you to correctly charge your phone as your original charger did, but at a fraction of the price. See details above.

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Samsung UN55B6000 55 Inch 1080p 120Hz LED HDTV

November 23rd, 2009 · Electronics

Samsung UN55B6000 55 Inch 1080p 120Hz LED HDTV




54.6″ screen (measured diagonally) * widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio * Touch of Color high-gloss finish — black with red accents * LED edge backlight for high contrast and natural colors * Auto Motion Plus 120Hz anti-blur technology for clearer motion *

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars Great TV if one can figure out how to use it.
My family and I just love this TV, particularly for watching sports. We looked at a lot of LCD and Plasmas but saw none that gave us the sense of depth this one does. It is like 3D. Moreover, our family room is also a sun room during the day but the picture is just as strong in the day time as it is when the room is dark. The viewing angle is comparatively wide. We see no appreciable drop off when it is viewed at an angle. It is large enough that my wife can view it from the adjacent kitchen with ease.

Learning how to use its features and to set it up is another matter and that is the one gripe I have with the TV. Samsung only provides a four page manual which tells the owner nothing. Instead it includes a flash drive which contains a manual for its use but it took me over three weeks to realize what the flash drive was for. The manual does not show the available ports or how things are to be connected to the TV. I finally figured it out by trial and error and got the flash drive connected. Finding out how to use it however, was again a lot of trial and error. Once I was able to read the pages, it was hard to read, mostly grey on black (I hate black-you can’t see where anything is on black). Figuring how to page the manual on the TV isn’t easy. Samsung provides numerous steps to take but the user has to leave the Manual screen to go through the steps and unless the user writes out all the steps, it is a tiresome process to follow the steps.

So I tried using the flash drive on my computer. Well the manual is in a strange format so it will not open normally. Windows searched for a driver that would allow viewing the manual and found one which I downloaded and installed The one I found that worked was from IrFanView but one must also download all the plugins before it will work. However, when I opened the Manual, it was unprintable except with a screen capture utility.

That was more trouble than it was worth and it then dawned on me to go to the Samsung Support Center and see if there was a Manual that could be downloaded. Voila, the Manual was available in both PDF and Word formats but because the Manual is in three languages, it is 273 pages long. Just print the first 75 pages.

What I found is that with no difficulty I could run picture shows directly from either my camera or from a card reader. They come out beautifully. If I tried to print pictures that big, they would be grainy as all get out. But the pictures show in full size on the big screen in terrific detail and color and they have depth.

But I wish the USB ports were either on the side or the front where they are easily accessible. I intend to wall mount the screen but if I do I won’t be able to get to the connections which are on the back. And even then it is difficult to insert USB cords because the recess is so narrow.

We love this TV however, because of the lack of a printed manual and the location of the USB ports, I can only give it 4 stars.

3 Stars Samsung UN55B6000 - Great HD, Poor SD
Well, I just got one of these, and I think I’ll be sending it back. The HD picture quality is really great, and looks fantastic with HD video sources such as cable and blu-ray.

However, the reality is, not everything I watch is HD, and there’s still a lot of standard-def channels around. This is where this unit falls down in my opinion. I’ve seen a review that said this unit has very good SD picture quality, but I have to disagree completely.

I have a 5-year old Hitachi 56-inch rear projection HDTV that I’m comparing side by side, and the Samsung is just really poor at displaying SD material compared to the Hitachi. The picture is grainy, blurry, and pixelated at times, whereas the Hitachi is MUCH smoother and more watchable. No SD signal is going to be perfect on a 55+ inch HDTV, but the difference between the Samsung and the Hitachi is dramatic.

Part of the problem is that the Samsung has no smart stretch mode for 4:3 material (variable stretch, where the center is stretched less and the edges more). They only offer 4:3 with black bars or zoom modes where half the picture is cut off. Hitachi/Sharp/Sony have had this feature for years and Samsung doesn’t, and I’m surprised.

But even comparing both in non-stretched 4:3 with black bars mode, the Samsung is very poor. This is too bad, because the HD picture is really great.

I’m sending it back.

4 Stars Enjoying the Samsung UN55B6000 HDTV
Image Quality and Connectivity:

This Samsung UN55B6000 is excellent technology and priced to move. We’ve got it hooked up to a cable box (MOT DCT 6200) via the 1 component connection and the image is sharp and crispy and the colors are vivid and bright.

We have an older PC connected via the VGA connection and the 3.5mm mini audio connection. Internet browser windows come up real sharp in 1920×1280i resolution. Sidebar: I’m also using wi fi and wireless mouse and keyboard.

Hi-res images look fantastic. This TV was assembled with web-browsing and computing in mind (Net widget, USB, JPEG and mp3 friendly) and Samsung has nailed it.

Online Support and Configuring the Cable Box:

Initially, the cable box was sending 720×480i to the TV. Fortunately I was able to find forums online with posts from a Samsung HD Tech and a cable co. employee that outlined the solution — turn off the cable box, hit the menu button (cable remote) and here you can select the higher (or different) resolution.

Additionally, the cable box required two power cycles for this (resolution) change to take effect but when it did I was viewing cable tv in 1920×1080i.

Using Samsung’s P.Size (Picture) Button:

When watching cable programming broadcast in HD, the 16:9 (aspect ratio) mode looks the best to me. For standard definition programming the Wide-Fit mode stretches the image a bit to fill the screen.

I’ve noticed some adjusting is required when flipping between channels, for example, sometimes CNN ticker text is below the screen and other times the Fox Sports Net FSN graphic is a bit above the screen. Perhaps this issue is addressed in the screen-fit mode, I’m not sure yet, I’ll have to mash a few more buttons. Overall, I give it 4.5 stars.

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