- This topic has 255 replies, 19 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 2 months ago by LAAFTERHOURS.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 1, 2009 at 11:15 AM #358254March 1, 2009 at 11:36 AM #357690LAAFTERHOURSParticipant
Samsung 52 inch LCD LN52A550 – Normally 2100
March 1, 2009 at 11:36 AM #357992LAAFTERHOURSParticipantSamsung 52 inch LCD LN52A550 – Normally 2100
March 1, 2009 at 11:36 AM #358132LAAFTERHOURSParticipantSamsung 52 inch LCD LN52A550 – Normally 2100
March 1, 2009 at 11:36 AM #358165LAAFTERHOURSParticipantSamsung 52 inch LCD LN52A550 – Normally 2100
March 1, 2009 at 11:36 AM #358270LAAFTERHOURSParticipantSamsung 52 inch LCD LN52A550 – Normally 2100
March 1, 2009 at 8:04 PM #358050patientrenterParticipantI just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.
March 1, 2009 at 8:04 PM #358352patientrenterParticipantI just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.
March 1, 2009 at 8:04 PM #358493patientrenterParticipantI just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.
March 1, 2009 at 8:04 PM #358526patientrenterParticipantI just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.
March 1, 2009 at 8:04 PM #358630patientrenterParticipantI just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.
March 2, 2009 at 7:38 AM #358321LAAFTERHOURSParticipant[quote=patientrenter]I just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.[/quote]
Old DVD players are good for bedrooms or smaller tvs. Old stereo equipment is useless if it doesnt have optical outputs. Luckily, you can pickup a new stereo receiver for cheap.
March 2, 2009 at 7:38 AM #358623LAAFTERHOURSParticipant[quote=patientrenter]I just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.[/quote]
Old DVD players are good for bedrooms or smaller tvs. Old stereo equipment is useless if it doesnt have optical outputs. Luckily, you can pickup a new stereo receiver for cheap.
March 2, 2009 at 7:38 AM #358762LAAFTERHOURSParticipant[quote=patientrenter]I just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.[/quote]
Old DVD players are good for bedrooms or smaller tvs. Old stereo equipment is useless if it doesnt have optical outputs. Luckily, you can pickup a new stereo receiver for cheap.
March 2, 2009 at 7:38 AM #358798LAAFTERHOURSParticipant[quote=patientrenter]I just bought my first TV in a while. I had a 1984 rotary knob 13″ TV until 2001 or so. When I started renting DVDs, I upgraded to a Sony Trinitron 27″ flat screen. I threw it out last year, just before I moved across country. Haven’t had a TV since then.
The one I just purchased is a 65″ Plasma (Panasonic TH-65PZ850U, $4800 online incl tax and delivery). Should be good for watching movies. Of course, all the ancient DVD and sound equipment I have may not even work with this new thingy. For people who hardly ever buy things, it’s shocking to see how far behind we can get in the technological knowledge required to make an informed purchase of a common consumer good.[/quote]
Old DVD players are good for bedrooms or smaller tvs. Old stereo equipment is useless if it doesnt have optical outputs. Luckily, you can pickup a new stereo receiver for cheap.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.