scottgee1
RF renegade
Well, I just bit the bullet and ordered a Panasonic plasma that was on sale at a great price at a local dealer. Should be interesting to pop my SD card straight into the TV for some 50" images! TV will be here later this week.
OK! Please let us know how you like it!
telemetre
Established
Have a CRT television, but I don't use it a lot.
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
re: cables ... I buy all my cables (not just AV, but Ethernet and USB as well) from Monoprice.com ... all have been at least very good quality, if not excellent, and the prices are good. I may have had one suspect cable, but at the price paid, it was no issue.
fotomeow
name under my name
Ooooo!!! I'm not a gent
I should perhaps have put a smiley after the "instead of doing stuff" bit. I did not mean that anyone watches tv for seven hours a day (or whatever time there is after working, sleeping, bathing etc). For any sane person watching tv and having a life are not mutually exclusive, but it is an activity that takes time out of the already full day. Grading contact-sheets and watching X-Men 97 are probably not best done simultaneously.
The last option on the ballot was "None of the above, why?" - I read this as implying that a photographer is somehow expected to have a television. Why might that be? I was expecting possible answers with reasons including a big tv giving the most cinema-like view to well crafted cinematography, for example. Or some cable-channel with darkroom or digital programming, that sort of thing. But no-one has come up with a reason why photographers specifically would appreciate television in general, though there have been some interesting observations on the technical side of things.
I'll willingly accept that I am weird and anti-social in not watching tv, as I have misinterpreted the whole question.
Thanks for your clarification. Perhaps I should've added more weight to the possibility of misinterpretations.
On my side, I was not trying to imply that fotogs should or would have a TV. On the contrary, I tried to give the "no TV" folks an avenue to say why they they dont. And I was trying to focus on those fotogs that IF they have TV, what do they have and why.
thirtyfivefifty
Noctilust survivor
Don't really watch TV, unless it's out in front of me, but I were to buy one, I'd consider my purposes, and pick one that's pleasing, non distracting. Something that focuses your attention on what's being played rather than the TV itself.
fotomeow
name under my name
Don't really watch TV, unless it's out in front of me, but I were to buy one, I'd consider my purposes, and pick one that's pleasing, non distracting. Something that focuses your attention on what's being played rather than the TV itself.
exactly. one of the challenges is to find a TV or any other electronic device that "blends in" to my/our environment. I think thats one of the hallmarks of a good tv/device, is that it does not hold the room hostage, and only brings attention to itself when being used.
Phil_F_NM
Camera hacker
Back in the mid-80s, lightning struck our house in Colorado and killed our television. Actually caused a small electrical fire right behind the tube. We went for 7 years without a TV aside from a portable 13" black and white set that was usually only tuned to something with reliable weather. After a TV reappeared years later, myself and my younger brother never really took to watching it, preferring instead to ride our bicycles or go out and get in some kind of trouble outdoors.
These days TV is my computer, which I usually don't have network speed to support or more often, the real life drama that occurs within the framelines of my camera. The live view of my X100 is pretty close as well.
Phil Forrest
These days TV is my computer, which I usually don't have network speed to support or more often, the real life drama that occurs within the framelines of my camera. The live view of my X100 is pretty close as well.
Phil Forrest
ottluuk
the indecisive eternity
I haven't had a TV set for years. For the occasional movie night I just borrow a beamer to plug into the laptop. White wall, lights off, audio through the regular stereo system (NAD+B&W)... works great for me (but obviously won't work if you have a TV habit).
DougFord
on the good foot
exactly. one of the challenges is to find a TV or any other electronic device that "blends in" to my/our environment. I think thats one of the hallmarks of a good tv/device, is that it does not hold the room hostage, and only brings attention to itself when being used.
...yeah man, my sony kvxbr910 really ties the room together...
DNG
Film Friendly
2 LCDs
42", 32"
42", 32"
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
...yeah man, my sony kvxbr910 really ties the room together...![]()
well, yeah, that's just your opinion, man ...
NickTrop
Veteran
I enjoy movies. I don't watch much TV at all. Seinfeld, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, American Horror, and The Walking Dead are all the series TV I've watched regularly in the last 15 years? My old standard def tube TV is good enough for this. It still works, works just fine, and I can't see pitching it into a landfill which would cause unnecessary polition and be wasteful imo. I'll get a flat screen when my standard def dies only because at such time that's all that's available.
Movies, however, are another matter. I watch movies on a portable 11" DVD player I've had for years using headphones. The size of the screen doesn't matter. What matters is the level of distraction. With an 11" screen a foot away from your eyeballs, in a quiet room (often a coffee shop) with headphones the outside world is truly blocked out.
This is the closed method imo for emulating the movie theater experience in my experience... the size of the screen has nothing to do with it at all... it's the degree to which you can block out the world around you and focus your attention on only the film
Movies, however, are another matter. I watch movies on a portable 11" DVD player I've had for years using headphones. The size of the screen doesn't matter. What matters is the level of distraction. With an 11" screen a foot away from your eyeballs, in a quiet room (often a coffee shop) with headphones the outside world is truly blocked out.
This is the closed method imo for emulating the movie theater experience in my experience... the size of the screen has nothing to do with it at all... it's the degree to which you can block out the world around you and focus your attention on only the film
CK Dexter Haven
Well-known
I think a CRT still looks way better then any of those flat things. Like film still looks way better then digital.
No, sir.
Plasma. Gorgeous. And, i'm sensitive to such things.
I'm always astounded by people who "don't watch tv." Of course, it's my constant companion because i have no outside life.... No wife or kids. Even my cat died two years ago.... So i loves my tv. It's the only voice in the apartment. [Is anyone else crying right now?]
You have to hunt, but there is a significant amount of quality programming out there. Game of Thrones, for one thing. Best writing on tv, and the production is insane. Think of how involved the Lord of the Rings trilogy was a few years ago. This is of higher quality, and they do it 10 times a season. It's nuts. Other good stuff: The Killing and Mad Men. And, if you have Netflix, there are some really good British crime dramas. LUTHER was great. I'm now involved with Wire in the Blood. Now Netflix has a great hospital comedy: Green Wing. And, a Scottish dramedy called The Book Group.
And, of course, Sports, Sports, Sports. The Formula 1 season is in full swing....
Dwig
Well-known
"None of the above" since I don't own a TV. What very little entertainment and news video I do watch I watch on my computer, which has an LCD monitor.
victoriapio
Well-known
Had Sony and Panasonic wide screen CRTs and they were nice but both died on me. Went to an LG plasma 46" and love it. I think it was on sale at Best Buy for about $589. Dark rooms are best for plasma. Plasma is "film like" and this is coming from a digital still shooter. I like watching movies, soccer games and various documentary channels.
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
Speaking of sports ... One reason I bought the Panasonic 50" plasma was better representation of the hottest game on ice. Now I can see the puck from the back of the room, no smearing/lag, etc. Go Leafs Go!
fotomeow
name under my name
Had Sony and Panasonic wide screen CRTs and they were nice but both died on me. Went to an LG plasma 46" and love it. I think it was on sale at Best Buy for about $589. Dark rooms are best for plasma. Plasma is "film like" and this is coming from a digital still shooter. I like watching movies, soccer games and various documentary channels.
Thats really interesting how some folks feel that CRTs are more film-like, while some folks feel plasma is more film-like.
I really dont know which camp I am in.
However, I can say that after watching some Blu Ray DVDs, it looked so real, it almost looked fake!
Weird.
narsuitus
Well-known
No Plasma
No LCD
No LED
No cable
No satellite
Netflix DVDs on my laptop
Internet via a very slow AT&T telephone modem
TV shows via a “digital antenna” on a cathode ray TV tube
However, I am very tempted to build a state-of-the art TV room to watch the last season of “Breaking Bad.”
No LCD
No LED
No cable
No satellite
Netflix DVDs on my laptop
Internet via a very slow AT&T telephone modem
TV shows via a “digital antenna” on a cathode ray TV tube
However, I am very tempted to build a state-of-the art TV room to watch the last season of “Breaking Bad.”
scottgee1
RF renegade
However, I am very tempted to build a state-of-the art TV room to watch the last season of “Breaking Bad.”
IMO, that show is extraordinary enough to justify the cost.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
. . . On the contrary, I tried to give the "no TV" folks an avenue to say why they they dont. . . . .
Why would I?
Well, OK: for when even the really dull threads on RFF are not mindless enough...
Cheers,
R.
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