| dongo8 said: Sure, but only if you are buying an 80+ inch screen, I'd like to see you TRY and differentiate between 4k and 1080p on a standard living room sized TV (60 or smaller generally). Once 4k projectors become more prevalent, those will make a hell of a lot more sense than buying an 80 inch TV to take up a whole living room wall. Also, I said HARDLY ANY shows and movies available, which is absolutely true. Sure there are going to be more and more available because 4k/Ultra HD is the "In" thing, but it still makes hardly any difference to the human eye. They are analog and don't care about minute pixel details from the distance you would be watching a TV from. Look up the science |
Do you really know what you're talking about though? I mean projectors? Really? Picture quality and contrast, heard of it? If you have money, 4k is the thing to buy now. If you buy 1080p now you can get a new one in 2 years.
I got myself a Samsung JS9500 in 65". It has backlight in a lot of zones, great contrast, quantum dot and HDR, aka the only new technology TVs will get in the enxt 5 years. It's future proof and even moreso since you can upgrade the oneconnect box that houses most of the important hardware. It can't get any more future proof than that.
Yeah sure it was costly but that's what it takes to have the currently best TV on the market. So I'd try to tone down your absolutes of "it makes no sense to buy now". There is already plenty of 4k material and it's going to ramp up significantly in the next 2 years.
And yes, the difference of 1080p and 4k on a 65" at the distance of 3m is huge.
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