Sunday, June 26, 2011

Toshiba Cell TV Review


Technology blog from Bangladesh


Toshiba Cell TV Review - Here is Latest Toshiba Cell TV Review from Serbatop. Sweet, it’s just what the world needed: An HDTV that uses the powerful Cell chip, currently utilized to power the Ps3. OK, so might not look like a match made in heaven (but you just can’t play Uncharted 2 without owning a separate console - bummer), there nonetheless remains lots of promise in Toshiba’s new Cell TV series of premium sets.

All but guaranteed to ship at a price to match, these models, for sale in two lines - the Genensis Design (55' and 65' units) and Illusion Design (46', 55' and 65' models offered) families - threaten to create both primetime and movie time more enjoyable. Thank 1080p upscaling of movie and tv content; the opportunity to display images in 3D (including 2D content that’s converted over); and also a built-in 1TB hard disk drive and wireless 802.11n networking for retrieval of networked or online content. The sets even promise to improve those videos you shot in your blog, adding pixels and contrast to have them to semi-watchable quality, finally giving viewers the opportunity to tell skaters independent of the trees they’re so often recorded crashing into. Actually, 480hz refresh rates don’t hurt either, promising smooth motion in nearly any mode, making it even more enjoyable to view balls fly inside your favorite sporting event (provided it’s not professional quilting).

But while the specs are extremely impressive, what really piques our interest is the benefit these HDTVs will ostensibly place close at hand. While connected home theater components have offered most of these same features (content upscaling, streaming media, USB media support, Internet video playback, etc.), few have provided this kind of all-in-one solution. From a built-in Blu-ray player to automatic set calibration that really senses the room’s color temperature and adjusts your TV accordingly, there seems to become a vast and compelling suite of features here to fulfill all comers.

Everything we actually want to know though is when well it’ll all work in practice, whether we’re thinking about feature overkill and the way much it’ll cost to relish this type of luxury and convenience? Because realistically, you’re staring at way more power than the average TV viewer is more likely to use in the course of a single set’s lifetime, aside from on a everyday basis. Will it be worth the asking price? Are these features implemented in a way they can be practically accessible by less tech-savvy consumers? Do you even need to consider shelling out for a set that crams so much crap into a single screen? These questions remain to be answered, preferably while kicking back, opening a cold one and watching a 3D home conversion of Avatar, and not at the friend who owns the palatial estate’s place.

After know some features and how about Toshiba Cell TV Review, maybe you want to buy it? :D..


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