HDTV Magazine
Welcome, Anonymous  •  Sign In  •  Register  •  Help
» » »

LED TVs Omaha NE

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for LED TVs. You will find helpful, informative articles about LED TVs, including "Truth Patrol: Best Buy Explains �LED TV�". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Omaha, NE that will answer all of your questions about LED TVs.

Best Buy
402-399-9601
7520 Dodge St
Omaha, NE
Best Buy
402-331-1847
7949 Towne Center Pkwy
Papillion, NE
Best Buy
402-289-5389
333 N 170th St
Omaha, NE
Verizon Wireless
(402) 391-3663
10000 California St
Omaha, NE
Steve's Home Video
402 333-6600
2819 South 125 Ave
Omaha, NE
Best Buy
402-334-4111
12210 K Plz
Omaha, NE
Best Buy
712-366-9198
3115 Manawa Centre Dr
Council Bluffs, IA
Ecreamery
402-934-3888
5001 Underwood Ave.
Omaha, NE
Crystal Image
(402) 571-3032
8909 Bedford Circle #2
Omaha, NE
T & K Detector
(402) 333-6889
2006 S 141ST Cir
Omaha, NE
Data Provided by:
 

Truth Patrol: Best Buy Explains �LED TV�

HDTV Truth Patrol

Most of the Truth Patrol tips are sent in by readers, but this is one that I found myself, thanks to a lead from TWICE eNews Daily. They published a link to a YouTube video that was apparently created by Best Buy to train its staff about the Samsung “LED TVs“. As I and many others have pointed out (including the New York Times), the name is misleading because it implies that it’s a display technology different from LCD TVs. So it’s informative to see what Best Buy tells its employees to emphasize about these new sets.

Here are the main points covered in the video: ultra thin, picture quality, eco-friendly, InfoLink Internet connection, and a soundbard. In the entire four minute video, the onscreen trainer says the word “LCD” exactly twice. And in both cases, the context is ambiguous at best.

The first occurance comes near the end of the picture quality segment, as the trainer says “That’s going to give you the LED LCD at 120 Hz 3D effect.” Huh? First, it’s a lot of jargon to cram in one phrase, and no, this is not a 3D television. Yes, you can get a 3D impression from some images, but it’s not a stereoscopic 3D display. But let’s see what leads up to this statement. It comes after discussing the “Clear Panel Display” feature: “There’s no barrier between the LEDs and the front of the panel screen. That light will shine through a lot better.” No barrier between the LED and the front of the screen? So it must be the LEDs that are making the image, right? No, there is in fact a barrier; the LCD layer between the LED lights and the front of the screen are responsible for blocking the light so that you get an image. No blocking of the light, no picture.

This image from the Samsung LED training video shows how the Clear Panel design reflects light from the room, especially on a black screen.

And for the record, the clear panel design simply means that they didn’t put on an anti-reflective coating or film as a top layer. This layer would diffuse the light from the screen slightly and reduce sharpness a bit, but would also reduce the sharp reflections you see on the screen in the video.

The other mention of “LCD” comes in the eco-friendly section, where the trainer states that “you’re going to use about 40% less energy than your traditional LCD TV.” Okay, they get partial credit for not being outright misleading by saying “with your LCD TV”, but adding the modifier “traditional” does not make it clear that the LED TV and the traditional TV are both LCDs. In fact, I expect that many people would infer from this statement that the LED TV was not an LCD.

The bottom line is at no time does the trainer say that LED TVs are a new and improved form of LCD TV, or that they replace the traditional fluorescent backlight wit...

HDTV Almanac - Truth Patrol: Best Buy Explains “LED TV”
by Alfred Poor on September 29, 2009

Click here to read the rest of this article from HDTV Magazine