Is there much 4K content on FreeView and FreeSat these days?
Long and complicated story which I won't bore you with.
Anyway I am in the market for a new TV of about 40" (perhaps more).
Most these days seem to be 4K.
Is there much 4K content on FreeView and FreeSat these days?
Oh, and I would still need a PVR - are there any good FreeSat PVRs which
do 4K?
On 26/02/2023 15:39, David wrote:
Long and complicated story which I won't bore you with.
Anyway I am in the market for a new TV of about 40" (perhaps more).
Most these days seem to be 4K.
Is there much 4K content on FreeView and FreeSat these days?
None. Although I doubt if you will find a TV from any of the main manufactures that isn't 4K.
Long and complicated story which I won't bore you with.
Anyway I am in the market for a new TV of about 40" (perhaps more).
Most these days seem to be 4K.
Is there much 4K content on FreeView and FreeSat these days?
All the content at the chosen location will be free to air, (although I suppose there could be network content).
As an aside we are thinking of ditching Virgin Media Tivo because we now
get most of our content over the Internet.
So should I focus on streaming not free to air?
Oh, and I would still need a PVR - are there any good FreeSat PVRs which
do 4K?
Assuming of course positive responses re 4K over FreeSat!
Cheers
Dave R
--
AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64
$ky do 4k over satellite, but you have to pay.
Quite a lot of 4k content free on YouTube.
Long and complicated story which I won't bore you with.
Anyway I am in the market for a new TV of about 40" (perhaps more).
Most these days seem to be 4K.
Say, I've got the typical post-70s layout of a living room, where the TV
is sat in a corner - instead of dominating the whole space square-on as
a cinema screen.
4k on iPlayer from time to time.
Gold - for example.
The 42" was pretty good, but having seen larger screens elsewhere, when we upgraded to 4k 2018 we opted for a 55" screen.
On 27/02/2023 12:12, Adrian Caspersz wrote:
Say, I've got the typical post-70s layout of a living room, where the TV is sat in a corner - instead of dominating the whole space square-on asMy mother at first resisted having a 40 inch flat screen as it was "too large" for the room. With the aid of a bit of cardboard cut to the size
a cinema screen.
of a flat screen TV she was persuaded that it was actually smaller than
the front of her 21 inch CRT set which not only had a large speaker
grill but a large area on the front for all the control knobs and
buttons and bezel surrounding the CRT of a 2 to 3 inches.
The CRT set also had to be set out from the corner owing to the depth of
the CRT set. The replacement 40 inch flat panel actually fitted into the corner a bit further back.
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On 27/02/2023 16:19, R. Mark Clayton wrote:
The 42" was pretty good, but having seen larger screens elsewhere, when we upgraded to 4k 2018 we opted for a 55" screen.Almost the same as I've done, and in the same timescale.
Initially 40 inch and in the past few years a 55 inch screen. What I
noticed most was the improvement in the overall quality of the picture especially in normal daylight viewing conditions (QLED).
Although the 55 inch is bigger than the 43 inch the overall size not by much. My 40 had a very wide bezel whereas my 55 inch has a thin
minimalist bezel
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