[HN Gopher] Ask Wirecutter: Can you recommend a not-smart TV for...
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       Ask Wirecutter: Can you recommend a not-smart TV for me?
        
       Author : deeg
       Score  : 317 points
       Date   : 2023-04-07 17:50 UTC (5 hours ago)
        
 (HTM) web link (www.nytimes.com)
 (TXT) w3m dump (www.nytimes.com)
        
       | voidfunc wrote:
       | Every Sony Bravia has the option to be setup as "dumb"
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | httpz wrote:
       | Can someone tell me why this is a big problem? I just plug in a
       | Chromecast with Google TV and I never have to touch the TV remote
       | or see the TV's original Smart TV UI ever.
       | 
       | Isn't this solvable by just plugging in a $50 streaming stick of
       | your choice?
        
         | suprjami wrote:
         | Even without wifi, these TVs are full of slow garbage operating
         | system, and I wouldn't be surprised if some vendor is making a
         | TV which you _must_ connect to the internet to use.
        
           | httpz wrote:
           | Even if the TV requires internet connection and the OS is
           | garbage, once I set the input source to Chromecast, I never
           | have to interact with the TV's OS.
        
       | ab_testing wrote:
       | The Spectre brand sold by Walmart has quite a few 4K dumb TV's .
       | I bought one a few years ago and connected my Apple TV and works
       | fine.
        
         | koolba wrote:
         | The TVs are okay for picture but the audio is terrible. An
         | inexpensive soundbar or speaker system goes a long way on those
         | TVs.
        
           | daveidol wrote:
           | Honestly I don't want my TV speakers to even attempt to be
           | good. It's just added cost for a feature I will immediately
           | disable anyway because my external speakers are always going
           | to be better.
        
           | thefourthchime wrote:
           | I've gone through soundbars, full stereo equipment, etc...
           | Call me a Apple fanboy, but my Airpod Max is amazing for
           | watching movies with 5.1 or Dolby. That and I don't have to
           | wake up the wife or kids.
        
           | giobox wrote:
           | This is true of virtually all TVs today, regardless of price
           | point.
        
         | 23B1 wrote:
         | Yes all of my TVs are Sceptre (https://www.sceptre.com) and
         | they're dumb and cheap.
        
           | warmwaffles wrote:
           | I love mine. Dead simple display.
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | rolenthedeep wrote:
       | "just don't connect it to the internet" is such a typical HN
       | response that completely misses the point. A smart TV with no
       | internet connection is still a smart TV. It still has an entire
       | operating system that needs to load wifi, ethernet, Bluetooth,
       | usb driver stacks. It still has an awful, flashy interface that
       | adds unnecessary steps between changing inputs. It still tries to
       | load god knows what apps every time you turn it on.
       | 
       | A dumb TV is a panel, some inputs, and an OSD menu that hasn't
       | changed since 2005. It has exactly two functions: select an input
       | and display that input. It should turn on in _seconds_ , not
       | minutes. Changing inputs should have at most two steps and take
       | no more than two seconds. It should have exactly as much
       | processing power as is required to pipe an hdmi signal to the
       | panel and nothing more. It should be so fundamentally incapable
       | of injecting ads that the very idea is laughable. Hell, I'd even
       | prefer it not have speakers.
       | 
       | Disconnecting your smart TV from the internet only means it
       | doesn't spy on you and advertise to you. It doesn't solve any of
       | the other problems making these devices awful.
        
         | madeofpalk wrote:
         | meh, i think _your_ response is more  'typical HN'. Nether are
         | more correct than the other, but if you're annoyed or
         | distrustful of all the internet connected factors of a TV, just
         | don't connect it to the internet. I think that's a fine non-
         | perfect, pragmatic solution.
        
         | mattl wrote:
         | You can build your own with a monitor and SFTP, etc.
        
         | nfRfqX5n wrote:
         | What TV takes minutes to turn on?
        
         | Terretta wrote:
         | The problem is when HD video standards evolve (DV, HDR10), or
         | bugs are found, etc., as well as handling things like VRR or
         | lip-sync.
         | 
         | Unless you externalize smarts to e.g. HDFury VRRoom (strongly
         | recommend), these panels _need_ some smarts, regardless.
        
       | lagrange77 wrote:
       | So called digital signage displays may be worth looking at. They
       | also look cooler.
        
       | tonymet wrote:
       | This is a big concern for the elderly. They have major challenges
       | dealing with "smart" TVs and smart phones - due to complicated
       | interfaces that are difficult to operate, hard to read, hard to
       | interact with , slow to respond do.
       | 
       | I see a huge business opportunity selling simplified consumer
       | devices to the elderly. I'm surprised CES hasn't yet created a
       | specific category or certification for elderly-friendly devices.
        
         | TheBozzCL wrote:
         | I've never seen a smart TV with objectively simple and good UI.
         | 
         | LG's annoying menus and motion-controlled pointer are a good
         | example of bad UI.
        
         | jacobsenscott wrote:
         | These products exist to some extent, but they don't seem very
         | successful. The "elderly" today could be people who may have
         | been using smartphones for 20 years, and wrote the foundational
         | parts of all the software we use today. Soon enough you will be
         | more likely to find someone who can debug a C program in a
         | retirement community than an MIT classroom.
        
           | tonymet wrote:
           | they'll suffer from the same visual, tactile and cognitive
           | challenges that make "smart" devices difficult.
           | 
           | I'm sure the audience here who hates smart TVs would also
           | prefer more elegant and intuitive devices.
        
       | slackfan wrote:
       | Article does not give a single not-smart-tv option.
       | 
       | The journalism quality is _outstanding_.
        
         | femiagbabiaka wrote:
         | Because they claim the not-smart versions aren't worth it. They
         | suggest alternative solutions, some of which commenters here
         | have already echoed. Why the cynicism?
        
           | nickthegreek wrote:
           | Then provide the reader with the name of the very best crappy
           | one and what features it lacks. That at very least answer's
           | the question that was posed. The writer mention bluetooth
           | connectivity as something they want tv's to have. I consider
           | that feature stupid and wouldnt consider that a negative.
        
           | slackfan wrote:
           | The "aren't worth it" argument is entirely arbitrary and not
           | backed up by a shred of evidence. Why defend bad journalism?
        
         | itronitron wrote:
         | The Betteridge's Law of Headlines strikes again.
        
           | kgwxd wrote:
           | For those that don't know, the law states "Any headline that
           | ends in a question mark will contain a comment mentioning
           | Betteridge's Law."
        
             | Cyphase wrote:
             | That's funny.
             | 
             | What it actually states is this:
             | 
             | "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered
             | by the word no."
             | 
             | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge%27s_law_of_headlin
             | e...
        
         | micromacrofoot wrote:
         | The point is that you can't buy a decent quality TV that
         | doesn't come with smart features, all you can do is keep it
         | disconnected from the internet.
        
           | typon wrote:
           | I don't understand why that's so difficult for people? Just
           | don't connect it to the internet. It's going to magically
           | show you ads or track you without internet.
        
           | karaterobot wrote:
           | You absolutely can, as noted elsewhere in this (and about 25
           | other HN threads).
           | 
           | In any case, if the question is "recommend a dumb TV to me"
           | the answer should include at least one dumb TV, even if the
           | editor wants to note that they aren't as good as his favorite
           | TV.
           | 
           | This article is like if someone asked for a recommendation on
           | a new bike, and the answer was "cars are faster, buy a car
           | and pretend it's a bike"
        
           | merlincorey wrote:
           | But that's not true since you CAN buy a Spectre brand non-
           | smart TV (which the only qualm listed in this thread is audio
           | quality, not picture importantly) and you can buy commercial
           | TV's meant for Hospitals and Office displays, etc.
           | 
           | One option is cheaper (Spectre) and one option is more
           | expensive (commercial), but you can, in fact, obtain a non-
           | smart TV today and they listed 0 options for them.
        
         | AdmiralAsshat wrote:
         | It is disappointing. Thorin used to work at Lifehacker--he did
         | good work there. The fact that he's only _quoted_ but didn 't
         | write it, though, makes it sound like someone just ambushed him
         | in the break room with a question and then wrote an article
         | about it.
        
         | frontiersummit wrote:
         | Is it just me or does anyone else feel that Wirecutter only
         | considers the upper end of the performance vs. price Pareto
         | curve? Recently I read their review on dehumidifiers, and all
         | 5x recommendations were Frigidaire/Electrolux models that cost
         | twice as much as the Midea unit I ended up purchasing. (Midea
         | is arguably a more reliable brand these days anyway, but I
         | digress)
         | 
         | Wirecutter wants to tell me what is the "best" when I really
         | want to know what is the cheapest product that will satisfice
         | my needs.
        
         | HDThoreaun wrote:
         | Because there are none that provide value. They list
         | alternative options.
        
       | rahimnathwani wrote:
       | This is discussed quite often on HN, e.g. lots of comments here:
       | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31706835
        
       | asmor wrote:
       | My TV is a projector (Benq TK700STi) and all its smart features
       | are contained within a Google TV plugged into the back that ships
       | with the device. You rip it out, you just get an extra HDMI port.
       | The only problem I have is having to dim the lights / close the
       | blinds to watch anything, but that makes using the TV a much more
       | deliberate act and I found that to actually be a positive.
        
       | docflabby wrote:
       | If only a small size (up to 32ish inches) needed 4k monitor would
       | probably surfice
        
         | patrakov wrote:
         | 43" 4K monitors also exist. E.g., Gigabyte AORUS FV43U. I am
         | using it right now.
         | 
         | If you need OLED, use Gigabyte AORUS FO48U (48").
         | 
         | And here is a 55" quantum dot monitor: Gigabyte AORUS S55U.
        
       | mgaunard wrote:
       | What a bad article. A TV without smart features is simply called
       | a monitor. Monitors are also usually much higher quality than
       | TVs.
        
         | elAhmo wrote:
         | Monitor is a different device compared to a TV. TV without
         | smart features is simply called a TV.
        
           | mgaunard wrote:
           | That is incorrect. A TV is simply a low-quality monitor,
           | possibly with some kind of tuner or extra superfluous low-
           | quality peripherals.
        
             | jeffbee wrote:
             | "That is incorrect" wasn't much of a rebuttal. Computer
             | displays usually look like shit for video content, because
             | showing video content well is much more complicated than
             | nerds seem to believe.
        
       | BEEdwards wrote:
       | If you don't connect it to the internet it's not a smart tv...
        
       | natural219 wrote:
       | I bought a Sceptre a few years ago for this reason. Best TV I've
       | owned, no smart features, great price and picture quality.
        
       | fideloper wrote:
       | From a (cynical?) content and affiliate point of view, I like the
       | style of taking user questions (bonus points if H.B. is a real
       | person) and answering it - rather than just a bland list of
       | products by "expensive but good, less expensive but less good"
       | that wirecutter is.
       | 
       | This lets the authors also recommend extra tangential items ("get
       | a projector!").
       | 
       | On another note, my trust in these types of things have gone down
       | overall (every google search for "best yadda yadda" yields a list
       | with affiliate links now, unless perhaps you append "reddit" to
       | your search).
       | 
       | Wirecutter still has some trust for me. Anyone else?
        
         | anateus wrote:
         | I use rtings.com as base and triangulate with Consumer Reports
         | and Wirecutter, and looks like I'm not the only one.
        
         | KerrAvon wrote:
         | Web search is useless, yes. Use Wirecutter, Consumer Reports,
         | rtings.com, reddit, not necessarily in that order. You can't
         | trust any one of these sources to have the same priorities as
         | you do, but you can trust that they're giving you useful,
         | original, non-link-farm-SEO-garbage information.
        
         | spondylosaurus wrote:
         | Wirecutter helped me find a brand of toilet paper that doesn't
         | turn my bathroom into a dusty wasteland, so for that alone I'll
         | always at least entertain their recommendations. Have yet to be
         | led astray by any of their picks.
        
         | adamwk wrote:
         | Yeah I think Wirecutter and I sucked it up and signed up for a
         | consumer reports subscription. Anecdotally I thought there was
         | a period (maybe 2017?) where Wirecutter was becoming less
         | trustworthy (maybe it was when I was looking for a mattress)
         | but I feel like the quality has returned since then. I think I
         | especially appreciate them for their more detailed sections
         | below the summaries. Such as unlisted products and how they
         | tested.
         | 
         | Other than Wirecutter and consumer reports I feel all I have is
         | sleuthing Reddit communities and even then it's hard to tell if
         | the users aren't undercover salespeople
        
         | DominikPeters wrote:
         | I thought the answer was terrible. It's wrong in saying you
         | must buy a smart tv to get a reasonable display panel (this
         | comment section does provide good non-smart options),
         | condescending to the question, needlessly verbose (sounded like
         | early versions of chatGPT to me tbh), and is uncritical in its
         | assumption that opting out of data collection means that you
         | won't be tracked.
        
           | m463 wrote:
           | "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when
           | his salary depends on his not understanding it." - Upton
           | Sinclair
        
       | CameronBanga wrote:
       | A couple years ago, I bought the domain "DumbTV.com" and
       | considered looking to source my own television sets from China to
       | sell at a premium with no added features besides HDMI ports.
       | Should have followed through on that.
        
         | oh_sigh wrote:
         | You could probably just link that to an amazon search result
         | for "commercial TVs", which generally lack smart features and
         | are mostly only designed for HDMI in
        
         | nrp wrote:
         | If you're not planning to do it, we may be interested in that
         | domain.
        
           | CameronBanga wrote:
           | Unfortunately, it looks like I am misremembering. I never had
           | the .com, but had the .io, .app, and a couple others.
           | 
           | The one I did get and keep was DumbTV.org, as I thought that
           | it may be more valuable to promote a basic sense of
           | principals that made a TV a "DumbTV", and promote that as
           | well as work to promote brands who were consumer friendly.
           | 
           | I would discuss giving up that domain if it would be of
           | interest. My email is my username at gmail dot com.
        
           | OJFord wrote:
           | 'We' being Framework? Did I miss some exciting news, or hear
           | it here first?
        
           | Rebelgecko wrote:
           | 55 inch framework gonna be lit, imagine how many expansion
           | slots it could fit
        
         | jjensen wrote:
         | Please do this.
        
       | mannyv wrote:
       | You can look at the "Commercial TV" section on Best Buy's site.
       | 
       | Westinghouse used to have basic TVs, but I see all their big ones
       | are smart now.
        
       | endisneigh wrote:
       | idk why people are against Smart TVs. It's not like the vendors
       | put a 5G modem on it and pay for the ads to be served to you
       | themselves with their own internet.
       | 
       | buy your tv, don't connect to wifi. connect to your device of
       | choice, done.
       | 
       | trying to avoid smart tvs is so silly, as you basically exclude
       | nearly all of the good ones.
        
         | beefee wrote:
         | Here are some reasons.
         | 
         | 1. Cost. I'd rather not pay for hardware and software I won't
         | use.
         | 
         | 2. Environmental impact. Unused and unwanted hardware is waste.
         | 
         | 3. Unauthorized users connecting to WiFi. TVs are often in
         | common areas. The settings menus have no authentication. So an
         | unauthorized user might connect the TV to a WiFi network.
         | 
         | 4. Automatic WiFi connections. TVs might connect to open or
         | partnered WiFi networks without telling the user. Hard to know
         | without an audit.
         | 
         | 5. Accidental WiFi connections. Settings menus might be
         | unintuitive (or deceptive) enough to trick users into joining
         | WiFi networks accidentally.
         | 
         | 6. Future data leaks. TVs might be recording data and saving it
         | to internal storage. The next owner of the TV could connect it
         | to a network, and years of stored data would be leaked. Again,
         | hard to know without an audit.
        
           | scarface74 wrote:
           | > Cost. I'd rather not pay for hardware and software I won't
           | use.
           | 
           | There is no more a "smart TV tax" than a "Windows tax". Smart
           | TV manufactures make money via selling user data that more
           | than offsets the $20 BOM for the smart TV components just
           | like computer OEMs make money installing Windows crapware.
           | 
           | > Environmental impact. Unused and unwanted hardware is
           | waste.
           | 
           | What unused hardware? When the built in smarts go obsolete,
           | you buy an external device and connect.
           | 
           | > Unauthorized users connecting to WiFi. TVs are often in
           | common areas. The settings menus have no authentication. So
           | an unauthorized user might connect the TV to a WiFi network
           | 
           | That's true and it was happening a lot when we first moved
           | into our condotel (condo that's rented out like a hotel when
           | we aren't there and we get half the proceeds) and when we
           | stay in hotels. I bought a wifi to wifi bridge to have a
           | private network.
        
           | endisneigh wrote:
           | 1. Smart TVs are cheaper
           | 
           | 2. Indeed
           | 
           | 3. You can disable this
           | 
           | 5. Disable
           | 
           | 6. Disable
           | 
           | Basically most of your criticism is resolved if you never use
           | the wifi to begin with, and all apply to any hypothetical
           | wifi enabled device you connect to a dumb TV, anyway.
        
         | ultrarunner wrote:
         | I use them for information displays. Our "smart" TVs boot
         | slowly, show dialogs, and then complain that they can't sense
         | the remote near enough to them, requiring a reboot. All in all
         | it's an incredibly frustrating experience for something that
         | should require zero interaction.
        
           | endisneigh wrote:
           | how often are you rebooting TVs for your information displays
           | that this matters? and there are smart tvs with dumb remotes.
        
         | amiga-workbench wrote:
         | Its because they're garbage. When a CRT from the mid 80's
         | powers on, warms its tube up faster and switches inputs quicker
         | than a modern TV, something is very wrong.
         | 
         | I'm pretty sure the NAND is degrading in my 2015 Sony Bravia,
         | its bordering on unusable with its hangs, jitters and crashes.
         | 
         | I barely trust any manufacturer to produce consumer grade goods
         | that actually do their job properly, the best way to get more
         | stuff working right is to narrow the featureset and hope that
         | they're not completely incompetent.
        
           | endisneigh wrote:
           | there are plenty of excellent (smart) tvs. it's funny to see
           | people posting on here talk about how long it takes for their
           | TV to power on. clearly if you're wasting free time on here
           | optimizing seconds isn't on the agenda.
        
             | amiga-workbench wrote:
             | My TV is either off to save energy, or because Android has
             | gone completely insane again and it needs rebooting.
             | 
             | If you do a full hard reset of my particular TV, it can't
             | even run its own OOTB setup smoothly. Sony have got it
             | playing some ambient chimes in the background, but the
             | audio constantly breaks up and glitches.
             | 
             | Its got an 8 core processor and it can't even handle audio
             | playback in a bit of the UI which should have had heavy QA.
        
               | endisneigh wrote:
               | I get that. the point is that turning a TV on, even if it
               | took 30 seconds, is basically nothing given the amount of
               | time you spend watching it. it's not the right thing to
               | optimize.
               | 
               | do you know how long it takes to turn on an iPhone? you
               | may have a stroke if I tell you.
        
               | felurx wrote:
               | Turning on a TV is something you usually do everytime you
               | want to use it, and it's just plain annoying to have to
               | wait. The comparison to an iPhone is bad, because you
               | rarely reboot it. Imagine you had to wait for the iPhone
               | to boot every time you want to read some stuff on the
               | internet or call someone.
        
               | endisneigh wrote:
               | Idk, my smart tv takes less than 10 seconds to turn on.
               | If you had a dumb tv you'd turn that on, but how long
               | does a smart dongle take? My Google tv takes about as
               | long as my smart tv
        
       | cat_plus_plus wrote:
       | Like one with physical nobs to adjust channel and volume? Ebay
       | should be good. Want a remote control and on screen menus? That's
       | a smart TV. The difference is that the price of embedded
       | controller to run built in UI and live guide is no longer any
       | lower than one needed to stream Hulu. Someone also needs to
       | develop TV firmware and Android development is much cheaper than
       | creating new embedded UI from scratch. And Hulu will pay for
       | having a remote button / prominent placement on home screen /
       | actual new user activation on the device. So overall, you are
       | getting a discount for having ability to stream directly from TV,
       | even if you never connect to WiFi. Enjoy!
        
         | excalibur wrote:
         | > Want a remote control and on screen menus? That's a smart TV.
         | 
         | This is factually incorrect. The defining feature of a Smart TV
         | is internet connectivity. You wouldn't know it from the
         | selection in your local Wal-Mart, but there are a great many
         | TVs in the world, with flat panels and menus and everything,
         | that lack the physical ability to connect to the internet. I
         | have one hanging on my wall.
        
       | raffraffraff wrote:
       | I bought LG digital signage. It's just a big monitor with a few
       | HDMI inputs. I stuck a tiny PC on the VESA mount, and I use that
       | to play media and stream online comment. I don't watch actual TV
       | (cable, satellite etc).
        
       | than3 wrote:
       | Sceptre is the only brand that still makes non-smart TVs.
        
       | elpool2 wrote:
       | The HiSense TV they recommend underneath "Buy a new TV but don't
       | connect it to Wi-Fi" is _NOT_ a good choice if you 're not going
       | to use wi-fi. It will regularly cut away from whatever you're
       | currently watching and ask you to finish setting up the Google
       | assistant thing. Or sometimes it will audibly say "I'm sorry, I
       | can't find you're wifi connection.." at random times, even though
       | you never attempted to enable wi-fi. There is no way to turn
       | these features off.
        
       | karaterobot wrote:
       | > "Any TV worth buying is very likely going to ask to connect to
       | your Wi-Fi, and that's been the case for many years now," he
       | says. "If you can find one manufactured recently that isn't
       | smart, I don't know that I would trust it to be worth what you're
       | paying for it, because it'll likely be missing several other
       | salient features that you may actually want, like Bluetooth
       | compatibility, HDR functionality, built-in channel scanning, or
       | the ability to auto-label and optimize devices by HDMI input."
       | 
       | TLDR: "Even though you're asking for a not-smart TV, we're
       | denying the premise of your question: you don't actually want one
       | after all. Here are a few smart TVs you might like."
       | 
       | I have a 60" Sceptre dumb TV, it's the exact one that comes up in
       | every single thread on this topic. It's 4K, it cost about
       | $400-$450 whenever I bought it -- 3 or 4 years ago -- and it is
       | great. It cannot connect to the internet, it doesn't know what a
       | Netflix is, and it has all the ports I need.
        
         | bscphil wrote:
         | > it'll likely be missing several other salient features that
         | you may actually want
         | 
         | I disagree with you; the answer they give is pretty reasonable.
         | Sceptre TVs are recommended everywhere you look if you search
         | for dumb TVs, they're not hard to find. But people looking for
         | a brand new TV often want common modern TV features, like HDR.
         | Heck, I'm holding on to an old plasma set until I can get a
         | decent OLED at a reasonable price. Hopefully where "smart"
         | features are either absent or enthusiasts have worked out how
         | to eliminate any privacy hazards.
         | 
         | A $400 Sceptre is very much not what I am interested in. But I
         | _am_ interested in a dumb, privacy-friendly screen! It 's not
         | "denying the premise" of wanting a dumb TV to point out these
         | limitations, as well as offer what is the most practical
         | alternative for most people - just don't connect it to WiFi.
        
           | karaterobot wrote:
           | > It's not "denying the premise" of wanting a dumb TV to
           | point out these limitations, as well as offer what is the
           | most practical alternative for most people - just don't
           | connect it to WiFi.
           | 
           | They denied the premise of the question. The question was
           | "Can You Recommend a Not-Smart TV for Me?" and the answer
           | wasn't just "no, there are none I can or will recommend",
           | which would be one thing. Instead the answer was "I'm not
           | going to answer that question, because you don't actually
           | want the thing you said you want". Since _some people_ want
           | dumb TVs, and they do exist, it would have been possible for
           | the author to recommend the best example of that product,
           | whatever they felt about it personally, or whatever
           | assumptions they had about what the questioner actually
           | wanted.
        
           | topspin wrote:
           | > modern TV features, like HDR
           | 
           | Many of the Sceptre 4K models have HDR. MEMC as well. Likely
           | the $400 price point is blown at that point, but who buys
           | 1080p and cares about HDR?
        
       | itronitron wrote:
       | Digital projectors are usually 'not-smart' and some of the short
       | throw projectors can be placed quite close to the screen or wall
       | if space is an issue.
        
       | TheBozzCL wrote:
       | No mention of smart TV's embedded planned obsolescence? If they
       | stop updating the firmware, eventually the smart features and
       | apps stop working as well.
        
       | TillE wrote:
       | For the HN audience especially, a simple computer monitor seems
       | like the obvious answer. Set it up however you like.
       | 
       | Maybe it's a little more complicated if you still have cable or
       | something, but unless you're watching live sports, there's not
       | much value there.
        
         | jblz wrote:
         | I'm pretty sure Cable boxes all have HDMI these days, so that
         | shouldn't be an issue.
         | 
         | Monitors won't have an over-the-air tuner, so, you'd need to
         | use an external device to watch broadcast TV.
        
           | rufus_foreman wrote:
           | You don't need a cable box or a TV to watch cable TV anymore,
           | you can stream it over it the internet.
           | 
           | HMDI from a computer to a monitor or a projector would work
           | fine.
        
         | dehrmann wrote:
         | Except most monitors are smaller than 40" and don't have
         | speakers.
        
           | porkbeer wrote:
           | If you are using the built in speakers on any tv, you are
           | losing the game. Additionally a few of my monitors have
           | crappy speakers that turn up as a hdmi output device, often
           | to my dismay.
        
       | hilbert42 wrote:
       | My solution is dead simple and easy to implement. Use a large top
       | line computer monitor and connect one or more dumb-type PVRs/Set
       | Top Boxes to it. Moreover, this is usually a much more flexible
       | arrangement than a TV (and one is never tempted to connect WiFi
       | because it's just not available--nor is there any snoopy O/S to
       | connect WiFi to).
       | 
       | Problem solved!
       | 
       | __
       | 
       |  _Edit: Dumb-type PVRs /STBs (the ones with no internal storage
       | and only a USB socket to add your own drive) are dirt cheap ($30
       | - $50 at most) and are available just about everywhere. Moreover,
       | they're very small and compact. Because of their convenience I'll
       | take them anywhere (couple directly into my PC or laptop HDMI
       | port, etc.).
       | 
       | I have at least six operational and two are new and still in
       | boxes (I almost consider them as disposable items--I just draw on
       | a new one when and as necessary)._
        
       | LaserDiscMan wrote:
       | They're not cheap or large, but broadcast monitors can be an
       | option here. Very expensive unless bought used though. Lots of
       | lesser known manufacturers in the space, and some great deals can
       | be found. The largest size most manufacturers will do is around
       | 32 inches.
       | 
       | CRT Broadcast monitors are somewhat of a collectors item for
       | retro game enthusiasts.
        
       | humps wrote:
       | All smart TVs are dumb if you perform one simple action. When the
       | terms and conditions screen pops up during the TV setup process
       | simply select "No." Congratulations, you have a dumb TV. This is
       | what I do and so far it has worked.
        
         | A4ET8a8uTh0 wrote:
         | You are assuming that:
         | 
         | 1. It will be honored 2. It will not be changed to default
         | during update
        
           | mrpippy wrote:
           | I'd be more worried that the TV would just say "T&C
           | acceptance is required to use this product, please return me
           | to the store" and turn itself off
        
           | humps wrote:
           | you can easily tell if anything has changed every time you
           | turn the TV on, plus, I haven't hooked them up to the
           | internet
        
       | TYPE_FASTER wrote:
       | It's worth noting that TVs that run Google TV (which includes
       | Sony Bravia) let you choose Basic TV or Google TV.
       | 
       | https://support.google.com/googletv/answer/10408998?hl=en#zi...
       | 
       | If you don't want to connect to the internet, you can select
       | Basic TV at setup and get the equivalent of a dumb TV.
        
         | EastSmith wrote:
         | Never buying a Sony device ever again. Got one 4,5 years back
         | (3rd one for last 10 years). It had Google TV and I could not
         | pass a screen and use the TV unless I agree a stupid EULA. Had
         | to take it, because ... family, but they made me feel soo
         | stupid.
         | 
         | Pair this with a horrible PS support and Sony is banned for
         | life for me.
        
         | captn3m0 wrote:
         | This only applies to new models, post 2021 I think. I'm
         | considering getting one, and I am having to check which year-
         | model combination has Basic TV support.
        
       | paxys wrote:
       | TL;DR - buy any good TV and don't connect it to the internet.
       | 
       | I bet the more tech-minded consumers can open it up and
       | physically disconnect the wifi module pretty easily as well.
        
       | djaychela wrote:
       | Since getting pi-hole on my home network, I've been amazed at the
       | amount of phoning home my old (7 years+) smart TVs are trying to
       | do. All of the domains are about content matching, which I'm
       | thinking is no longer happening since getting pi-hole as the
       | domains are never bring resolved for them.
        
         | nvr219 wrote:
         | Check this out:
         | 
         | https://imgur.com/VJVmDd3
         | 
         | This is from 2 days when there was literally nobody using
         | anything in the house because I was out of town.
        
           | norgie wrote:
           | To be fair, blocking can cause more requests than "normal" as
           | they don't always use good back offs. My Nvidia Shield used
           | to spam my DNS with 10s of thousands of requests a day like
           | this after I blocked the domain, but they seem to have fixed
           | it at some point.
        
       | emodendroket wrote:
       | I feel like all these extreme measures to try and protect your
       | privacy aren't really that effective and are a big inconvenience.
       | I like using the apps on my television.
        
       | lbotos wrote:
       | Search: <brand name> digital information display
       | 
       | Samsung 4k
       | https://www.samsung.com/us/business/displays/4k-uhd/qb-serie...
       | 
       | It's more expensive then the subsidized ones, but right in the
       | description:
       | 
       | QB65B--N * Direct-Lit 4K Crystal UHD LED Display for Business
       | Without Embedded Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
       | 
       | As others have suggested as well, possibly a monitor, but I'm not
       | aware of many 65" 4k monitors (But they may exist)
        
         | nrvn wrote:
         | DIDs are great but there are two main problems with them:
         | 
         | 1. They appear to be more expensive than consumer TV's
         | 
         | 2. They might be more difficult to find through usual channels
         | because they are targeted at businesses (but it probably
         | depends on where you are located)
        
         | ajmurmann wrote:
         | This seems to be a great option. It seems much harder to get
         | reviews and even buying options. Looking for an LG OLED, there
         | seem to be some really cool things from regular screens, to
         | flexible and transparent ones, but I need to "inquire for
         | purchase options" and the regular screen only comes in 65".
         | That's a good size, but more options would be great. It's sad
         | how harder it is to buy something that doesn't spy on you...
        
           | esperent wrote:
           | I've use a 48 inch LG OLED as a monitor for about two years
           | now. It's set in PC mode and except for the occasional time I
           | hit the wrong button on the remote, I completely forget it's
           | a Smart TV.
           | 
           | I did connect it to the wifi once to update the firmware.
           | Note that it also took a lot of fiddling with I first got it
           | to get a decent picture setup - although part of that was
           | finding out that I needed a fancy HDMI cable to get 4k@120hz,
           | and another part was figuring out that HDR isn't really
           | viable for daily PC usage (turning on HDR makes the picture
           | _darker_ , because although the dynamic range has gone up,
           | the max brightness of OLED is not that high so it has to make
           | things dimmer for the dynamic range to be available. Plus
           | Windows HDR management sucks). Oh and the gloss finish means
           | it's not suitable for bright environments. But otherwise it's
           | a beautiful screen and would be an awesome TV too with wifi
           | turned off and connected to a TV dongle of some kind.
        
       | dopeboy wrote:
       | My parents bought a LG TV recently. The UI is just horrific.
       | Which PM thought the real time cursor was a good idea?
       | 
       | As much as you can, get an AppleTV and leave it on.
        
         | TheBozzCL wrote:
         | The worst part of the cursor is that it seems there's no way to
         | disable it. At least I haven't found it.
        
       | btdmaster wrote:
       | A reminder that https://github.com/iptv-org/iptv is back up now
       | with all its hardware non-requirements!
        
       | newhotelowner wrote:
       | LG used to had non-smart tv for hospitality/healthcare market.
       | All newer models has apps/calls home if you connect to ethernet
       | (Even their non-smart line up). I was able to launch Youtube from
       | my computer. I am assuming they may call home through HDMI.
        
       | carom wrote:
       | I have Sceptre (recommended on HN) and love it. Just hook up an
       | Apple TV and it is great. If you are an audio snob you'll want a
       | sound bar, but for a cheap TV it does the job well.
        
       | agilob wrote:
       | A reminder ha LG webOS can be exploited by visiting a website
       | https://github.com/RootMyTV/RootMyTV.github.io
        
         | dan1234 wrote:
         | Patched in mid 2022, unfortunately.
        
       | NoraCodes wrote:
       | This article misses the point. I desperately want a non-smart TV
       | because I don't want to deal with the absolute mess that is smart
       | TV software. I want to have a TV with a nice panel, a basic OSD
       | that lets me switch inputs and set up color/HDR profiles, and
       | that's _it_.
        
         | cortesoft wrote:
         | My main issue with smart TVs is how long they take to turn on.
         | I just want it to turn on and off in under a second.
        
         | andrewia wrote:
         | Did you actually read the article? They said their first two
         | picks will boot to the most recent input without any UI to step
         | through, which they consider acceptable. Combined with CEC
         | input switching, I agree that the UI shouldn't be much of a
         | concern. I use a TCL P607 disconnected from the internet, and
         | the UI is not a concern because of CEC switching.
        
       | CivBase wrote:
       | > If you can find one manufactured recently that isn't smart, I
       | don't know that I would trust it to be worth what you're paying
       | for it, because it'll likely be missing several other salient
       | features that you may actually want, like Bluetooth
       | compatibility, HDR functionality, built-in channel scanning, or
       | the ability to auto-label and optimize devices by HDMI input.
       | 
       | I don't care about any of those features except for HDR, and I
       | suspect that's the case for most others who would be interested
       | in a dumb TV.
       | 
       | That said, the easiest solution is really just to buy a smart TV
       | and keep it off your network and connect a laptop or HTPC. But
       | I've heard horror stories of newer TVs auto-connecting to
       | whatever open network they can find and some even having LTE
       | radios, so who knows how long that strategy will work.
        
       | aj7 wrote:
       | Why is it bad to have a TV connected to wi-fi or the internet?
       | How is Apple TV a solution to that problem?
        
         | TheBozzCL wrote:
         | Several reasons:
         | 
         | 1. Planned obsolescence at the firmware/app level. Eventually,
         | manufacturers and app maintainers stop supporting your TV. When
         | that happens, you need to change the whole smart TV. Dumb TV +
         | smart box means you can upgrade separately and at your leisure.
         | 
         | 2. Privacy concerns. Smart TVs openly monitor your usage, which
         | includes not only how you use the TV but also what you watch on
         | it, and sell that data for marketing purposes. Often you need
         | to agree to the tracking to get many of the connected features
         | - for example, my TV demands that I accept data collection to
         | use AirPlay. Locking features behind an EULA and tracking is
         | crappy, IMO. TBH I don't know if Apple TVs are better, but I
         | Pihole my whole home network anyway.
         | 
         | 3. Bad UI and UX. Many smart TVs are a PAIN to navigate.
         | Convoluted, inconsistent menus, menus hidden inside menus
         | hidden inside menus, slow start-up speeds or even straight up
         | slow UI. The added complexity doesn't really justify the extra
         | features, IMO. Purpose-built smart boxes normally do a better
         | job. And if you don't like the current UI, selling it and
         | buying a new one is much more convenient that selling your TV
         | and buying a new one.
        
       | robg wrote:
       | The chart here shows the problem:
       | 
       | https://www.aei.org/carpe-diem/chart-of-the-day-or-century-8...
       | 
       | TVs have been so commoditized, if you were a TV manufacturer, how
       | would you stay in business in the next thirty years?
        
       | dehrmann wrote:
       | Are there any open source TV firmware projects? In theory, I
       | don't mind smart TV features, I just don't trust most companies
       | with my data, and getting the interface right is hard.
        
         | hosteur wrote:
         | Raspberry pi and Kodi or libreelec?
        
           | suprjami wrote:
           | You misunderstood the question. These are not operating
           | systems which replace to TV's rubbish firmware.
        
       | mongol wrote:
       | Dropping traffic from the TV's MAC address in the firewall shodo
       | the trick, no? Or perhaps it changes over time?
        
       | Thorentis wrote:
       | Buy a projector. This has two benefits:
       | 
       | 1) Most projectors are not smart, so it solves that problem.
       | 
       | 2) You don't have a gaping black hole in your living space urging
       | you to be sucked into watching it. I despise TV and mass media
       | and what it has done to our society. A projector at least hints
       | at film being more of an art form that can be appreciated for its
       | own sake. You have a movie night, you set everything up, you pack
       | it up when done. It's intentional, it's not just "I'm bored,
       | let's scroll through Netflix and find something watchable".
        
       | sys_64738 wrote:
       | I know it's offtopic but I knew our leisure viewing was in
       | trouble way back when the first Blu Ray DVD players had fans in
       | them which came on loudly when watching movies.
        
       | giantg2 wrote:
       | "When you're setting up your new TV, opting out is as simple as
       | skipping the step that connects your TV to the internet."
       | 
       | Is this actually true? I thought I've heard of some TVs
       | connecting to any open network automatically if it was connected
       | to a secure one.
        
       | aidenn0 wrote:
       | > "Any TV worth buying is very likely going to ask to connect to
       | your Wi-Fi, and that's been the case for many years now," he
       | says. "If you can find one manufactured recently that isn't
       | smart, I don't know that I would trust it to be worth what you're
       | paying for it, because it'll likely be missing several other
       | salient features that you may actually want, like Bluetooth
       | compatibility, HDR functionality, built-in channel scanning, or
       | the ability to auto-label and optimize devices by HDMI input."
       | 
       | I literally need zero of these things:
       | 
       | 1: BT, auto-labeling HDMI inputs: My receiver does these
       | 
       | 2: built-in channel scanning: I live in a valley and can reliably
       | pull in 0 channels
       | 
       | 3: HDR functionality: This would be nice for future-proofing, but
       | I don't own any HDR content.
        
       | fzeindl wrote:
       | I use a Philips 43 inch PC monitor attached to an AppleTV. Works
       | great, and has 100ms response.
       | https://www.philips.at/c-p/BDM4350UC_00/brilliance-4k-ultra-...
        
       | hklijlyh wrote:
       | YC mods, lololol most obvious AstroTurf yet. Stop trying to make
       | dumb tvs a thing. Where are all these these people in real life?
       | It's just so obvious it's worse then those shitstack articles.
        
       | that_courtney wrote:
       | The spyware and apps are revenue features for the manufacturer.
       | They help subsidize the price of the set. So get a TV with all
       | that bloat for best value, and just keep the device off the net.
       | 
       | If you do want to put it on the net, here's some help on
       | disabling privacy-busting features:
       | https://www.consumerreports.org/electronics/privacy/how-to-t...
        
       | joshchaney wrote:
       | Amazing that their budget recommendation is the Roku TV. I can
       | tell you from experience if you don't connect them to Wi-Fi there
       | is an LED that will constantly blink on the bottom front of the
       | TV, with no way to disable in software. So unless you like your
       | TV with an electrical tape aesthetic, I would avoid Roku TV's.
        
         | alphabet9000 wrote:
         | my guess for why that is there is hinged on roku's assumption
         | that most people's brains are so fried that the concept of
         | something being "distracting" isn't even a possibility any more
        
         | andrewia wrote:
         | It depends on the TV manufacturer, since Roku is just a
         | software layer. My TCL P607 has no such LED.
        
       | SeanLuke wrote:
       | > "Any TV worth buying is very likely going to ask to connect to
       | your Wi-Fi, and that's been the case for many years now," he
       | says. "If you can find one manufactured recently that isn't
       | smart, I don't know that I would trust it to be worth what you're
       | paying for it, because it'll likely be missing several other
       | salient features that you may actually want, like Bluetooth
       | compatibility, HDR functionality, built-in channel scanning, or
       | the ability to auto-label and optimize devices by HDMI input."
       | 
       | I don't think I would want _any_ of those features.
        
         | kulahan wrote:
         | The HDMI input labeling thing is nice. When my family comes to
         | visit, it's pretty neat that they can go to inputs and select
         | "Chromecast" or whatever instead of "HDMI 1"
        
       | dublin wrote:
       | Another thing to look at in new TVs, both smart and dumb, is
       | egregious boot times. Instead of the expected instant-on, many
       | new TVs take a Looooooong time to start up - the Sceptre 4K TV I
       | bought for the office last year takes 20 seconds to boot and
       | display output - and it's a _dumb_ TV!
       | 
       | I built IoT sensors with embedded web interfaces 20 YEARS AGO
       | that booted in under a quarter second. It's intolerable in the
       | third decade of the 21st century that we're stuck with boot times
       | for _appliances_ that are two orders of magnitude slower that
       | that! (And FWIW, Red Hat had full Linux booting in under five
       | seconds over a decade ago, but it never caught on...)
        
       | yumraj wrote:
       | Both of the recommendations are Chinese brands, that doesn't
       | inspire much confidence..
        
       | znpy wrote:
       | I bought a 42" full hd tv from the brand names "Ok" in 2021, at
       | mediaworld/mediamarkt.
       | 
       | It's completely dumb but it's got 2 hdmi inputs. I love it.
        
       | bombcar wrote:
       | Best Buy has "non smart" in the search options:
       | https://www.bestbuy.com/site/searchpage.jsp?_dyncharset=UTF-...
       | 
       | I've not dug into details if they are actually all non-smart TVs,
       | but perhaps I should. Ability to cast to the damn thing easily
       | from a phone is really nice, though.
        
       | adamwk wrote:
       | For me it's less about privacy (I just disconnect it from wifi)
       | but just how slow they are. I bought an Apple TV to get around
       | this but it still takes so long for it to even turn on
        
         | YurgenJurgensen wrote:
         | My TV remote has a dedicated Netflix button. I don't have a
         | Netflix subscription and never will, but it wastes 30 seconds
         | every time I accidentally push it because the UI is that slow
         | and backing out of this nonfunctional Netflix app takes so many
         | steps.
        
       | ed25519FUUU wrote:
       | The approach I've taken is to just keep my TV off the internet
       | (never join a WiFi network) and make it smart via an Apple TV,
       | which I personally believe to have the strongest privacy
       | protection of any smart TV device.
       | 
       | Another bonus is my TV UI hasn't changed despite changing and
       | upgrading TV brands.
        
         | emmelaich wrote:
         | I attempted to do this with a new TCL TV. And continue using
         | Chromecast dongle. But the damn thing freezes. So I'm using the
         | inbuilt Chromecast for now!
        
           | cinntaile wrote:
           | Why do you want a not-smart tv? I thought the point was to
           | not have tracking, but you were using a Chromecast dongle and
           | I would expect Google of all companies to keep track of what
           | you watch at least? Is it the security risks that probably
           | show up after the tv software stops updating?
        
             | freedomben wrote:
             | I would guess Google's privacy stuff is still an order of
             | magnitude better than the TV manufacturers. Google actually
             | gives you a decent amount of control over your data. There
             | are definitely better privacy options than a Chromecast,
             | but I don't think it's fair to put Google in the same
             | category as Vizio/Samsung/et al.
        
         | was_a_dev wrote:
         | Hasn't some models (thinking Samsung) been shown to connect to
         | any WiFi network they can?
         | 
         | edit: Appears to be an urban legend, with not much substance to
         | back it up!
        
           | codetrotter wrote:
           | Sure but if everyone has WPA2 encryption enabled on their
           | network, such as is the case in my neighbourhood, then there
           | is no network for the TV to connect to anyways.
        
             | prmoustache wrote:
             | Couldn't a device looking for wifi just connect wherever
             | you or your neighbours hit the wps button on their wifi
             | router?
        
             | midasuni wrote:
             | Amazon whisper net etc from ring doorbells and other
             | privacy violating things come to mind as possible
             | connections.
             | 
             | Mostly theoretical though.
        
           | KerrAvon wrote:
           | But that would require an accessible WiFi network.
           | 
           | I'm sure someday it'll be impossible because they'll embed 5G
           | chips and do it over cell without involving your consent, but
           | that day isn't here yet.
        
             | ghayes wrote:
             | Simple, just put it in a Faraday cage.
        
               | tomcam wrote:
               | It's not that simple. The Faraday cage I got from Costco
               | seems to phone home to a server in China. Obviously I
               | returned it and used the money to buy a whole lot of
               | tinfoil.
        
               | samtho wrote:
               | I'm... not sure if you are joking.
        
               | all2 wrote:
               | Quarter inch mesh is pretty cheap at the local hardware
               | big box. It'd be good for attenuation up to 7ish Ghz.
               | 
               | I've seriously considered getting a roll and building a
               | cage.
               | 
               | There's also emf paint that one could use.
        
               | YurgenJurgensen wrote:
               | Surely, grounding the aerial would be the simpler option,
               | right?
        
               | lostlogin wrote:
               | It's surprising how cages work. The MR one at work will
               | leak if the door is open .5mm, it lets blue tooth and
               | wifi through and some phone calls.
               | 
               | Works pretty well for MR at 3T (which is actually more
               | like 2.89T) though - 125Mhz ish.
        
               | kube-system wrote:
               | Anyone who says that "blocking" wifi is easy is someone
               | who hasn't tried. Even very expensive professionally
               | built cages don't "block", they attenuate. And modern
               | wifi equipment is surprisingly good at working just fine
               | with weak signals.
        
               | modriano wrote:
               | The mesh would have to be so fine that you wouldn't be
               | able to see the screen (unless you were inside the
               | "cage").
        
               | tzs wrote:
               | Google is telling me that the mesh for a Faraday cage
               | that would block WiFi could have hole sizes up to about 5
               | mm. Suppose you made your faraday cage (or at least the
               | part that goes in front of the screen) out of 40 gauge
               | wire (0.07874 mm diameter) with the wires spaced 2.25 mm
               | apart.
               | 
               | On a 70" 4K TV a pixel is about 0.4 mm x 0.4 mm. If the
               | mesh were close to the screen I think about 30% of the
               | pixels would have wire in front of them. Of those 30%,
               | 1/6 would both a horizontal and a vertical wire in front
               | (let's not go crazy and talk about orienting the mesh
               | diagonally or anything like that), and 5/6 would only
               | have one wire in front of them. So that's 70% of pixels
               | not interfered with, 25% having one wire in front of
               | them, and 5% having two wires.
               | 
               | The 25% with one wire crossing would have about 20% of
               | the pixel occluded by the wire. The 5% with two wires
               | crossing them would have about 36% occluded.
               | 
               | My guess is that the screen could be seen pretty well
               | through that.
        
               | hilbert42 wrote:
               | Make life easy, just stop RF getting to and from your TV
               | by cutting the WiFi, Bluetooth and mobile antenna leads.
        
               | lancesells wrote:
               | Simple, go wired and encase the house in a faraday cage.
        
               | xattt wrote:
               | Houses finished with stucco tend to do this as a side
               | effect, since stucco is applied onto a fine metal grid
               | screwed to framing.
        
               | eropple wrote:
               | Really, anyone who's lived in a sufficiently old house
               | knows you can run your _own_ Wi-Fi in a Faraday cage.
               | Just probably not between rooms.
        
               | lostlogin wrote:
               | Underfloor foil insulation works pretty well as a cage.
               | It also adds a nice electrocution risk when installing
               | and is banned in my area for this reason.
        
               | eropple wrote:
               | Metal lath under the plaster. Ripping that out was a
               | mess.
        
             | giobox wrote:
             | I've seen rumblings that day may be very soon, too. Once
             | devices in the home have embedded prepaid 5G out with your
             | control, all sorts of home networking/firewall challenges
             | are going to arise. We are entering a world in which it
             | will cost very, very little to embed 5G into almost
             | anything with say 1GB of prepaid eSim data for analytics
             | collection, regardless of whether device resides on your
             | LAN or not.
        
               | dwighttk wrote:
               | living room faraday cage
        
               | hilbert42 wrote:
               | As I said above, just nuke the antennas (a box cutter
               | through the antenna leads is usually enough. If you're
               | really paranoid, short the lead out at or near the
               | equipment end (as near as to the feed IC as is possible).
               | 
               | I do this on old smartphones that I have no intention of
               | ever using as a phone again (say for testing APS etc.).
               | It's dead easy, a razor blade through the circuit board
               | tracks that connect to the antenna(s) and it's all over--
               | no phone, with or without SIM (i.e.: no emergency
               | service) and no WiFi or Bluetooth.
               | 
               | Very simple really.
        
               | ed25519FUUU wrote:
               | There's only a fractional amount of people using smart
               | TVs without WiFi. I'm very dubious it's worth the cost to
               | imbed GSM cards in each TV to reach the fraction that
               | doesn't allow the TV on WiFi.
        
               | midasuni wrote:
               | Large portion of those who currently don't connect will
               | faraday cage their connection to remove the ability too.
               | 
               | Then of course there's a lack of 5G. I certainly don't
               | have any where I live. Just about have 1 bar of 4g near
               | the window.
        
               | rhn_mk1 wrote:
               | If that happens, it's going to be to reach those who
               | can't set up wifi manually. It's better user experience
               | not to have to, leading to fewer returns.
        
               | YurgenJurgensen wrote:
               | It would simplify setup for non-technical consumers. I'm
               | sure people complain about having to input a WiFi
               | password with a TV remote.
               | 
               | WiFi/Cellular convergence as a concept also doesn't seem
               | like the most unlikely future.
        
               | gruez wrote:
               | > It would simplify setup for non-technical consumers.
               | I'm sure people complain about having to input a WiFi
               | password with a TV remote.
               | 
               | So they'll add a $50 LTE/5G modem to the BOM just to save
               | the trouble of entering a password using arrow keys, a
               | process that takes maybe 2-3 minutes?
        
               | samtho wrote:
               | They're closer to $18-$25 at quantity these days,
               | especially if you don't want one with GPS built in as
               | well, you can get it on the lower end.
        
               | giobox wrote:
               | I've long wondered about what wifi/cellular looks like on
               | an infinite timescale... it does strike me as unlikely
               | too we will maintain two separate wireless standards
               | forever for IP data. I think embedded cellular or
               | equivelent global wireless access will one day just be as
               | taken for granted as embedded wifi in a lot of devices.
               | Technologies like eSims are all steps in this direction.
               | 
               | I've seen others in this thread argue embedded cellular
               | isnt worth the cost, but this misses the critical point -
               | if it costs almost nothing (we are close to this point
               | already) and is already built into every off the shelf
               | SoC, of course manufacturers will use it. We are talking
               | pennies per unit at scale here in future.
               | 
               | The auto industry has already done this - Ford for
               | example have embedded cellular analytics you can't turn
               | off (or at least its non-obvious to me as an owner) on
               | _every single new Ford_ and has done so for several years
               | now, and you don 't pay a penny as the end user, even on
               | their most basic entry level cars.
        
               | hilbert42 wrote:
               | It wouldn't last five minutes on my car without being
               | disabled. Easy to do, use a portable spectrum analyzer,
               | find the source of the RF and then nuke the antenna.
               | 
               | Same goes for any other appliance that radiates RF
               | signals (IoT, etc.).
        
             | girvo wrote:
             | It'll be 4G, because NB-IoT is already here and pretty
             | excellent for data collection.
        
             | AlexAltea wrote:
             | This already happens with Nespresso coffee machines (they
             | have an SIM that connects to the Internet, whether you want
             | it or not). That day is already yesterday.
        
               | hilbert42 wrote:
               | For heaven's sake just cut the leads that freed the
               | antenna with a razor blade or box cutter.
               | 
               | All over, done permanently. Never another internet
               | connection.
        
               | robocat wrote:
               | A SIM? Reference?
        
               | shrike wrote:
               | Wow, they sure do. Page 29 of the user guide for the
               | Nespresso Zenius says -
               | 
               |  _This coffee machine is equipped with M2M (Machine to
               | Machine) techology which may be activated in due time
               | with your agreement. Thanks to a SIM card already
               | integrated in the machine, such network connections will
               | offer new services (subject to further terms and
               | conditions) to its customers and improve the after sales
               | process by automatically communicating machine
               | troubleshooting / diagnostics to our Customer
               | Relationship Centre (depending on country requirements
               | and specificities)._
               | 
               | https://www.nespresso.com/shared_res/manuals/zenius/www_Z
               | eni...
        
               | oblio wrote:
               | I imagine that can be disabled physically?
        
               | blep_ wrote:
               | Everything can be disabled physically.
        
               | dexterdog wrote:
               | Except an escalator
        
               | YurgenJurgensen wrote:
               | I also imagine that naive attempts to disable it would be
               | interpreted as a way of defeating some kind of always-
               | online DRM on the coffee pods.
               | 
               | And if coffee pods don't come with always-online DRM yet,
               | I'm honestly surprised at Nespresso's lack of dedication
               | to this dystopia.
        
               | hilbert42 wrote:
               | If that's the case then it cannot be used in any
               | place/location where there is no signal.
               | 
               | If so, then there would be hell to pay the first time if
               | happened. If it works sans connection, then do what I've
               | said elsewwhere and that's to cut or short out the
               | antenna lead.
               | 
               | Removing the SIM may be deemed provocative by the
               | manufacturer, if there's no signal reception then that's
               | a different matter (the user can't be blamed).
        
               | freedomben wrote:
               | doubtful. I'm sure it will refuse to work if it can't
               | talk to home base, and that home base will have some sort
               | of certificate pinning so only their servers can
               | authorize it do make the coffee.
        
               | fghsqwads wrote:
               | Now I want a used one just to rip open and find the SIM
               | card.
               | 
               | I wonder if I can use it for mobile data.
        
               | peterfarkas wrote:
               | What a time to be alive. This should be disclosed on the
               | front page of the manual and not hidden in the
               | smallprint. And it should come with instructions on how
               | to disable it with a physical switch.
        
             | hilbert42 wrote:
             | _" ...they'll embed 5G chips and do it over cell without
             | involving your consent,"_
             | 
             | There'd be hell to pay if they ever did that. Moreover,
             | it'd be impossible to keep the fact quiet if deployed at
             | any reasonable scale.
             | 
             | A much bigger looming threat is the possible closure of
             | terrestrial Free-to-Air TV broadcasting (it was an early
             | agenda item to be discussed at the 2028 WARC/WRC (World
             | Administrative Radio Conference) but was dropped early on.
             | 
             | That it ever got there in the first instance is a very big
             | worry, it shows that people in high places have been or are
             | considering such a move).
        
             | philsnow wrote:
             | I think the most likely next steps is integrating with
             | Amazon Sidewalk instead of 5G. I don't know what the
             | relative availability of 5G signal vs Sidewalk signal is,
             | but I'm pretty sure Amazon has a dashboard tracking the
             | latter.
        
           | Macha wrote:
           | No, this appears to be a HN urban legend. It's always asked
           | in these threads and the closest thing that anyone has been
           | able to provide is one person asking one time on the samsung
           | forums why there tv was connected to the neighbour's wifi
           | (openly in the TV's own menu). So either there's a giant
           | conspiracy which literally nobody else in the world has
           | noticed or attempted to reproduce, or her
           | kids/neighbour/whoever just connected it to the first network
           | that'd work.
        
             | Lammy wrote:
             | It's possible, and that's all that matters IMO
        
               | fshbbdssbbgdd wrote:
               | If "possible" is all that matters then you have to
               | include stuff like "I'm on a special list where if I
               | order a monitor from Amazon, they'll send me a version
               | with a secret chip on the inside of the case that
               | broadcasts my secret TV viewing habits to the NSA."
        
             | lostlogin wrote:
             | It's too hard on the Unifi line, but Ubiquiti Edgerouters
             | allow some neat rules. Eg if on port 53 and not coming from
             | the Pihole, send back to Pihole.
             | 
             | The Samsung was very chatty, but didn't connect to an
             | unsecured wifi network I had setup for testing.
             | 
             | It's gone now and an equally chatty Sony is in its place -
             | with not network access.
        
             | was_a_dev wrote:
             | Fair enough - I think it is most likely something I read
             | via HN
        
               | Macha wrote:
               | Yeah, HN seems to be the primary community responsible
               | for the belief that this is commonplace.
        
               | lostlogin wrote:
               | Maybe, but the shitty behaviour of big tech companies
               | makes such things very easy to believe.
        
           | lelandfe wrote:
           | I looked into this last year and couldn't find much. I found
           | a few forum posts of people claiming their TV connected to a
           | public WiFi but none of them seemed particularly reputable.
        
           | lr1970 wrote:
           | There is Amazon SideWalk [0] that could potentially allow
           | devices join mesh WiFi behind your back.
           | 
           | [0] https://www.amazon.com/Amazon-Sidewalk/
        
             | nickthenerd wrote:
             | Yes. I was looking for this comment before saying the same.
             | This is the biggest selling point of Sidewalk to
             | appliance/product companies. All the usage data, ad data,
             | analytics, even remote control of devices can now happen
             | even if your devices are completely disconnected from your
             | home WiFi. If your neighbor has an Amazon Echo... now its
             | basically connected to the internet. Even if you don't have
             | neighbors, there could be a LoRa gateway a mile away on a
             | cell tower, and its now connected.
        
             | freedomben wrote:
             | Yep, make no mistake this is absolutely going to happen.
        
           | iijj wrote:
           | I have a 3 month old Samsung TV with recent firmware. I am
           | trying to use it as a dumb offline TV connected to an Apple
           | TV (which is, of course, online). Short version is it does
           | not automatically connect to networks without user input, but
           | it prompts people all the time and inevitably ended up back
           | on the network.
           | 
           | It won't forget network passwords without a full reset. So if
           | you connect to download firmware then disable the connection,
           | it is one click away from someone re-enabling it. If there's
           | an unsecured network available, you're only 2-3 clicks away
           | from joining that.
           | 
           | With other people in the house using it, the only way to
           | reliably keep it off the internet is to connect it to a
           | network, allow it to verify the connection works, then block
           | it from making any more outgoing connections at the router
           | level. It seems to be ok with this situation and doesn't
           | complain too much.
           | 
           | My original plan was to setup HDMI CEC and lock away the
           | Samsung Remote to prevent people from getting into trouble.
           | But when the TV is turned on vi HDMI CEC, half the time it
           | wants to immediately run the OLED refresh cycle, and will
           | automatically shut off and start doing that unless you
           | actively prevent it from doing so with the remote. This is
           | annoying because they have a setting to run the OLED refresh
           | at night when not in use. It's almost like they sabotaged
           | this use case on purpose to force people to interact with the
           | Samsung UI.
           | 
           | I should have bought a projector, assuming one can still get
           | projectors that aren't similarly infected.
        
             | freedomben wrote:
             | My Samsung tries to be smart too and ends up wrecking
             | everything. I have a Steam Deck and a Linux laptop that I
             | want to connect via HDMI, but the TV tries to do some sort
             | of detection thing but doesn't wait long enough and does
             | some sort of power cycle on it. The net result is that the
             | laptop will switch from HDMI on to HDMI off and back every
             | few seconds, and the TV will never connect. It's
             | aggravating because it's such a stupid simple bug, but I
             | have zero control over the TV.
        
               | exmicrosoldier wrote:
               | My Sony smart tv was great for 3 years because I never
               | connected it to the internet, but ever since I did, it
               | hangs, takes 2 minutes to allow switching inputs, and in
               | general just sucks.
               | 
               | I will not make the mistake of ever connecting one of
               | these to the internet again, and if I have to buy a Giant
               | monitor for 2k, so be it.
               | 
               | I'm 90% sure that the flash drive on the TV wore out and
               | they want me to replace what is otherwise great working
               | hardware for features I don't even want anymore.
        
               | iijj wrote:
               | Yeah, it is terrible. They have settings to modify
               | resolution/refresh/latency mode, but those settings are
               | always overridden if the TV's auto detection thinks it
               | knows better.
               | 
               | About a third of the time it will insist my Xbox is a
               | 1440p/60Hz input, and I can do nothing about it except
               | reboot all the things.
        
               | freedomben wrote:
               | Ugh, it's so utterly terrible. I really wonder, what kind
               | of engineers are building/designing these things? Do they
               | not even use their own products, or if they do they never
               | plug external devices in?
        
         | stephenboyd wrote:
         | That is also the advice given in the article.
         | 
         | Unfortunately it follows that with "occasionally connect the TV
         | to the internet for a minute to see if it needs any firmware
         | updates" which is pointless if the TV is already working
         | properly.
        
         | KerrAvon wrote:
         | Yes, this. I bought an LG OLED C2 recently, plugged in an Apple
         | TV, have not connected the TV itself to the internet. Works
         | absolutely fine; bonus is that the apparently annoying voice
         | control option is disabled. You don't need firmware updates
         | unless there's a specific bug that you need fixed, and you can
         | update by USB stick if you do need a fix.
        
           | benreic wrote:
           | I also got a C2 and briefly connected it via WiFi before I
           | had the Apple TV. After hooking up the Apple TV I turned WiFi
           | and thought I was all set, but it keeps turning WiFi on by
           | itself and checking for updates which is really annoying.
           | Might do a factory reset to clear out the WiFi password.
        
             | jeremy_wiebe wrote:
             | Just change the wifi password. :-)
        
             | philsnow wrote:
             | Change your wifi password, give the new password to your TV
             | and make sure it connects, then change the wifi password
             | (either to another new password or to the old one) and
             | don't give the new new password to the TV. They generally
             | don't remember and try previous passwords.
        
           | polio wrote:
           | I see a lot of people buying the C2. Is this the undisputed
           | winner for a new 4K television? I am vaguely in the TV market
           | but am mildly intimidated by the variety.
        
             | Zizizizz wrote:
             | I have one (coming from a 32 inch cheap Samsung 1080p from
             | 8 years ago) and it's pretty insane how good it looks. I
             | have to leave it in Filmmaker mode for movies as it's too
             | good at interpolating frames on shows and colour correcting
             | things to make it look like raw acting footage. But have
             | perfect blacks in games is incredible, the amount of times
             | I stopped to just look at the surroundings in shadow of the
             | tomb raider was too many to count. The refresh rate also
             | supports 120fps for shooters so it's buttery smooth in
             | comparison to what I used to have. Putting nextdns as my
             | DNS resolver blocks the ads on it and having the built in
             | Chromecast support for Netflix and YouTube is pretty handy
             | as well.
        
           | A4ET8a8uTh0 wrote:
           | Yep. Extra bonus for LG since it uses webOS ( and that thing
           | is great ). If you are concerned about TV connecting to
           | something it shouldn't, you can setup a honeypot ( I think
           | Unify still supports that ) and see what it tries to do. I
           | never connected mine and didn't notice any attempts ( but it
           | is an older OLED model ).
        
           | slig wrote:
           | Bought one recently as well. I connected mine because it's
           | easier for everyone in the house, but I used a trick to hide
           | most of the crapware: change the country to "Other" [1]
           | 
           | [1]: https://old.reddit.com/r/LGOLED/comments/vhbqru/remove_t
           | rend...
        
         | frereubu wrote:
         | I did the same with a projector and an old Mac Mini. Upgraded
         | the internal hard drive to a small SSD and hung an 8TB spinning
         | HD off the back with an attached Blu-Ray drive. Has the benefit
         | that you can do things like rip / play Blu-Ray discs, choose to
         | use Netflix / Amazon Prime / Apple TV / Eurosport / whatever
         | you want. Only downside is that the Mac Mini is so old now (>
         | 10 years) that it doesn't get OS updates. But I'm not sure I
         | care about that too much as long as it works, because I have no
         | personal data on it.
        
         | funkdified wrote:
         | This is 100% the way. Did the same thing with my new Samsung.
         | It's been a very clean experience.
        
         | kube-system wrote:
         | > Another bonus is my TV UI hasn't changed despite changing and
         | upgrading TV brands.
         | 
         | One of the recent updates to my TV's software introduced bugs
         | to a feature I use a lot. It is very infuriating, and it's one
         | of the reasons I refuse to buy an expensive TV. Even if the
         | hardware is good, I'm one software update away from a piece of
         | garbage.
        
           | MrMember wrote:
           | An "update" to my TV made it so if it's on an input channel
           | with no detected input for 10 seconds it will automatically
           | switch back to the "smart" TV channel. Now if for some reason
           | an input source isn't working correctly and I'm trying to
           | figure out why I have to keep switching back to the correct
           | input channel. Which of course lags for like ten seconds
           | whenever it switches.
           | 
           | I'm never buying another "smart" TV.
        
             | freedomben wrote:
             | Heh, this happened to me with my Samsung TV. Never again.
        
         | datadeft wrote:
         | If your tv is not going to an open AP mode it is sufficient.
         | Some smart devices had open APs or weak security and it was
         | possible to exploit it.
        
           | m463 wrote:
           | my lg soundbar creates an access point to talk to the
           | subwoofer, it is annoying. I wish I could just run an optical
           | digital cable or something.
        
         | colordrops wrote:
         | Synology or Kodi is going to be better than Apple TV for
         | privacy, but usability takes a hit.
        
         | jjoonathan wrote:
         | My TCL TV bootloops if it goes more than 3 months without
         | downloading fresh ads. If you contact support, they walk you
         | through connecting to the network.
        
           | TheLoafOfBread wrote:
           | Can't connect to network. I don't have internet. Sorry.
           | Returning TV back because it does not work.
        
             | jjoonathan wrote:
             | "Sorry, out of warranty."
        
             | carlivar wrote:
             | This reminds me of my friend in the 2000's that would say
             | "I don't have email" when stores asked for his email
             | address. Even at the time, quite unusual unless you were
             | over 70 years old.
        
               | lostlogin wrote:
               | Apples 'hide my email' is gold for this crap.
               | 
               | It's less cringy than 'oh, it's
               | <the_store_name@<my_domain>.com'
        
           | dwighttk wrote:
           | huh, my TCL is fine disconnected... The only irritating this
           | as a flashing light around the power-button/ir-reciever that
           | comes on when it can't connect to a network, but I've stopped
           | noticing it.
        
             | philistine wrote:
             | Is it a RokuOS or Google TV?
             | 
             | My Roku one has none of those problems.
        
               | dwighttk wrote:
               | Roku
        
           | KeplerBoy wrote:
           | Phew, wondering if that's intentional.
        
         | dc3k wrote:
         | I did this with my A80J last year. During initial setup there
         | is the option to disable all of the smart TV features. It's
         | quite nice. Firmware updates can also be applied via USB stick,
         | so it never needs to connect.
        
         | than3 wrote:
         | You may want to get yourself an SDR kit and check that for
         | yourself.
         | 
         | They typically broadcast on 43-33 cm band, (700-900mhz), and
         | 2.4/5 ghz.
         | 
         | You'd also be wrong about Apple's privacy protection.
        
           | intelVISA wrote:
           | Unfortunately SDR is a bit of a pandora's box... once you see
           | how much data is covertly exfiltrated it's quite unnerving.
        
             | than3 wrote:
             | Well there is that and I've never been one to bury my head
             | in the sand.
             | 
             | I've always found its better to know than not know, since
             | you can only control what you know about.
        
           | ipqk wrote:
           | You can't just say someone is wrong without explaining why.
        
             | than3 wrote:
             | > You can't just say someone is wrong without explaining
             | why.
             | 
             | I can and I did.
             | 
             | It is not my job to educate or preach. They did not ask for
             | it.
             | 
             | If they want to learn the why's they can do their own
             | research which will be more impactful than any words I say.
             | Its not hard to find credible sources that describe these
             | things.
             | 
             | Doing what you said is just coddling them like they are a
             | child when they are a grown adult. It is unasked, insulting
             | and rude.
             | 
             | They can make their own decisions and do their own research
             | if they want.
             | 
             | Any in-depth study into apple's telemetry and data
             | collection practices pretty much covers what they need to
             | know to correct the incorrect.
             | 
             | Marketing is generally not credible.
             | 
             | Edit: Well this rating certainly demonstrates how many
             | helpless children read these posts and then because they
             | don't like it they flag to squelch others.
             | 
             | Sad state of affairs really when you get punished for being
             | rational, respectful, and adult. Eventually the kind of
             | thinking you promote will lead to the deaths of most
             | everyone given enough time and scope. Its a grand showing
             | of true stupidity.
        
               | all2 wrote:
               | You're being a dick. If you didn't realize that, that's
               | what is going on here.
               | 
               | To follow up on GGP(?), if I was going to look into the
               | Apple privacy protection stuff, where would I start? Are
               | there search terms, or specific sites or individuals you
               | can point me to?
        
               | than3 wrote:
               | > You're being a dick.
               | 
               | I'm being mature, and there is an important distinction
               | though not mutually exclusive.
               | 
               | If OP wanted to know more they could ask, and they didn't
               | so I was right in my initial assessment regardless of how
               | others feel.
               | 
               | I would start with google keywords: "apple telemetry
               | -site:apple.com" are a good place to start.
               | 
               | From memory some of the important highlights were in
               | 2016, there was an issue with the fast-fail network code
               | in macOS and other devices where applications would not
               | launch locally. Apple was forced to briefly disclose the
               | cause of the outage, which amounted to a telemetry server
               | update, a check-in at each application launch and other
               | actions was required and could allow apple to decide what
               | you can and can't run in realtime without your knowledge;
               | there were several news articles about it at the time.
               | 
               | There is the more recent articles about client-side
               | scanning, which they rolled back but they largely by
               | default upload everything to their cloud and do it there.
               | This is good for catching predators, bad if one of those
               | hashes they match against (which are not unique, one hash
               | matches many potential files, an inherent property of
               | modular arithmetic) cause a false positive, or if those
               | hashes match material that is not illegal, but seek to
               | censor. They don't disclose what they match specifically
               | so you'll never know, nor will you be able to dispute or
               | correct any mistakes.
               | 
               | There have been several blog posts by System
               | Administrators about the AppleTV and other Apple devices
               | probing/mapping their internal networks over the years,
               | and sending data up to the cloud. Its largely been
               | encrypted so we don't know what it is they are sending
               | but its a lot according to netflow and wireshark. If one
               | were to find out, and publishing it, it would serve as
               | proof of violating the DMCA. So it is unlikely this will
               | ever come to light from anyone domestically in the US.
               | 
               | SDR opens a whole new avenue to approach auditing Apple
               | devices that broadcast that data over the em spectrum,
               | its also important since anyone with an antenna can pick
               | that information up.
               | 
               | Additionally, they don't disclose how long or what
               | specific information they do collect about you, who they
               | share it with, and even when you tell them to not collect
               | info, they still do it.
               | 
               | The higher the amount, and time, that you store
               | information, the more likely it is going to be stolen.
        
               | freedomben wrote:
               | > _Sad state of affairs really when you get punished for
               | being rational, respectful, and adult._
               | 
               | Do you honestly think your comment was "respectful"?
               | 
               | Hacker News is all about rationality and respect, and a
               | big part of that is backing up your opinions/assertions
               | with evidence. Challenging people for unsubstantiated
               | claims is a staple here. If you want to be able to say
               | something like "You'd also be wrong about Apple's privacy
               | protection," expect to be challenged.
               | 
               | You are correct about Apple's privacy, but it is far from
               | a well-known self-evident fact (in fact to most people
               | it's widely considered that Apple is the darling of
               | privacy), so being challenged on it is (IMHO) reasonable
               | and even expected. Obviously you don't have to back it
               | up, but the result of that is going to be downvotes.
               | Also, any criticism of Apple on HN is risking downvotes
               | too. It's not rational, but it is reality.
        
               | than3 wrote:
               | > Do you honestly think your comment was "respectful".
               | 
               | Yes, it very much was.
               | 
               | I didn't waste their time, I didn't preach, I didn't
               | lecture on something they did not ask or want to hear. I
               | simply said they were mistaken. It was civil
               | conversation, not disparaging in any way.
               | 
               | If they were receptive to learn more, they would have
               | followed up, and could have asked, and they did not. That
               | was the choice they made.
               | 
               | You really can't be more respectful of their time,
               | attention, or choice.
               | 
               | You are right about challenging with argumentation and
               | building support for persuasion, but that challenge was
               | never accepted. There is an order to these things.
               | 
               | You can't communicate by talking 'at' people, both
               | parties need to engage.
               | 
               | > Apple on HN is risking downvotes too...
               | 
               | Honestly just breathing on HN with an unpopular, but
               | right opinion, risks down-votes. I've already spoken to
               | Daang about the structural issues, not that anything will
               | come of it.
        
         | xattt wrote:
         | If this is the way that new TVs will be used, Ethernet-over-
         | HDMI will see a comeback from the dead like nobody's business!
        
           | dymk wrote:
           | I doubt Apple would be allowing unfettered ethernet access
           | through the apple TV, privacy is kind of their shtick
        
         | lfkdev wrote:
         | I think a Pi4 with Kodi etc. is still way better for privacy.
        
           | snapetom wrote:
           | Agree with this. If Apple ever really turns to the Dark Side,
           | many here would be screwed.
        
           | gpanders wrote:
           | Probably true, but the Pi4 is not up to the task of
           | transcoding 4k video.
        
         | whalesalad wrote:
         | This is the pro gamer move. I have a new LG C2 OLED and I love
         | it. It has no idea that the internet exists. I use an Apple TV
         | as well.
        
           | threeseed wrote:
           | I have an LG C2 OLED and had it connected to the internet.
           | 
           | It spams me with in-screen notifications at least once a week
           | with either Privacy Policy updates or advertising new apps or
           | TV shows.
           | 
           | Great TV but definitely need to leave it unconnected.
        
             | foogazi wrote:
             | My LG did that then I just blocked it on the wifi router
        
             | Zizizizz wrote:
             | If you use nextdns or pihole you can block those. I do so
             | the home screen has no top 2/3 of TV suggestions, just my
             | installed apps at the bottom and the hi Def paintings from
             | the gallery app showing above them.
        
               | snerbles wrote:
               | Eventually these devices will use DoH (DNS over HTTPS) to
               | evade local ad and tracker blocking.
        
         | kneebonian wrote:
         | I just plugged a desktop into my big ole TV and then get a
         | wireless mouse and keyboard. Run Linux on that thing and I
         | control all of it, bonus points is that everyone knows how to
         | use it when they come over to my house.
        
         | 2OEH8eoCRo0 wrote:
         | Ethernet was added to HDMI
         | 
         | https://thehometheaterdiy.com/hdmi-with-ethernet/
        
           | johnea wrote:
           | "Or, buy 4K a monitor..."
           | 
           | It's 1/4 the area, minus all features, AND the same price!?
           | 8-/
           | 
           | It's a great option, for dell shareholders...
        
             | dpifke wrote:
             | We saw your comment the first time. No need to keep cutting
             | and pasting the same reply to different threads.
        
           | js2 wrote:
           | Pins 14 and 19, but HEC was never really adopted and those
           | pins are today used for ARC/eARC instead.
           | 
           | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI#HDMI_Ethernet_and_Audio_R.
           | ..
        
           | flangola7 wrote:
           | But why. HDMI is a video transmission format.
        
             | syntheticnature wrote:
             | To reduce the number of cables, in theory, though as noted
             | it's not really implemented.
        
             | tedunangst wrote:
             | It's a multimedia interface.
        
           | detaro wrote:
           | And is implemented absolutely nowhere.
        
         | retrac wrote:
         | > make it smart via an Apple TV
         | 
         | I repurpose the old laptops that I seem to accumulate for this.
         | Just about anything made in the last 10 years can handle at
         | least 1080p video, and will have an HDMI output. I add a small
         | wireless keyboard and use my regular desktop environment. But
         | you can add a remote and use one of the open source media
         | centre suites.
         | 
         | I do wish more TVs had a monitor-like sleep mode and accepted
         | the command for it over HDMI. And were actually low power when
         | they sleep. That seems to be pretty spotty.
        
           | MayeulC wrote:
           | Good idea for the laptop. You could use a smart plug (one
           | that runs esphome, for instance, athom.tech sells pre-flashed
           | ones) to wake the TV as well. And maybe the computer too.
        
           | nofinator wrote:
           | We do the same and it works well. We prefer a handheld
           | keyboard/mouse to control it. We've tried several and the
           | Lenovo N5902 [1] is our favorite by far.
           | 
           | It's also useful to have the Unified Remote server [2]
           | running on the media computer so you can control it from your
           | phone when you need to.
           | 
           | [1] https://www.newegg.com/p/09N-00A7-00001
           | 
           | [2] https://www.unifiedremote.com/
        
             | rocmcd wrote:
             | For anyone in the market for a remote, I have one of
             | these[1] and it's pretty awesome. I'll have to check out
             | the Lenovo as well.
             | 
             | [1] https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07WJGSXT8
        
             | NikolaNovak wrote:
             | Thumbs up for the Lenovo keyboard/mouse combo. I preferred
             | the trackball one, but the "trackpad"-y one works well too.
             | It feels good in hand, it's nicely sized, fits easily in
             | the drawer of nightstand table, and works well :).
             | 
             | (not sure if it's discontinued btw; I struggled to find it
             | in Canada last few years; but there are seemingly-identical
             | unbranded alternatives usually available on amazon, e.g.
             | https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B08H8LH7GP/ )
        
           | dlmilli wrote:
           | [dead]
        
           | dimenoz wrote:
           | Same here. I try to find 3-4 year old laptops with decent
           | graphics cards. It has served well as family gaming pc
           | (casual and retro games) and with attached external drive we
           | can watch family videos, photos etc. Not to mention ad-
           | blocking. Every time I'm at someone's house and have to use a
           | phone to stream things on the TV or to use those point-n-
           | click remotes to type things I lose patience now :)
        
         | johnea wrote:
         | "Or, buy 4K a monitor..."
         | 
         | It's 1/4 the area, minus all features, AND the same price!? 8-/
         | 
         | It's a great option, for dell shareholders...
        
         | samgranieri wrote:
         | this 100%. When I had my TV installed I explicitly told the
         | geeksquad guys who mounted it on the wall to not connect it to
         | the internet because I'm driving it with an apple TV
        
       | johnea wrote:
       | "Or, buy 4K a monitor..."
       | 
       | It's 1/4 the area, minus all features, AND the same price!? 8-/
       | 
       | It's a great option, for dell shareholders...
        
       | KaiserPro wrote:
       | NEC multisync displays
       | 
       | bright, designed to last for ages, built like a brick shithouse,
       | plenty on ebay.
       | 
       | They also come in huge sizes, for those that want such things.
        
       | vehemenz wrote:
       | As others have said, it's probably easiest to resign yourself to
       | reality. Buy a newer TV with a good panel, which will be a
       | "smart" TV, and make sure to never connect it to the Internet.
       | You can get a smart remote from there to overcome some of the
       | quirks.
        
       | tonymet wrote:
       | this is screaming for an open source tool and/or firmware to
       | "dumb down" smart TVs.
       | 
       | On Google TV it could apply app & service configuration settings
       | to turn off networking, recommendations, home screen content and
       | just enable the input-switcher . Since it is Android based, there
       | are lots of tools using ADB, debug tools, device policy etc that
       | could work.
        
       | lucasyvas wrote:
       | I think there are other options for commercial TV displays you
       | see in stores as well. If memory serves, Jeff Geerling did a
       | YouTube video on this.
        
       | pupdogg wrote:
       | I've designed and built many such TVs for the
       | commercial/industrial vertical. I am currently working on
       | developing such a TV for the consumer market and launching it
       | under the name DUMBO.TV
       | 
       | Let me know your thoughts. Reference pix of 70" industrial
       | display using Samsung LCD panel and in-house LCD controller with
       | physical OSD menu buttons along with IR/RS232 control capability:
       | https://imgur.com/a/k6zrH3s
        
         | [deleted]
        
         | whalesalad wrote:
         | Where is that overhead factory shot? I am in Detroit so it
         | immediately made me think of a vehicle assembly line.
        
           | pupdogg wrote:
           | Small world! Sterling Heights here. Automotive manufacturing
           | plants is a big vertical for us.
        
           | csours wrote:
           | Well, it's definitely in a GM body shop, but I don't know
           | which one. Maybe Ft Wayne?
        
         | lostlogin wrote:
         | If you survive the lawsuit from Disney, I'm in.
         | 
         | I'd prefer a much smaller tv (32-40") but I'm weird like that.
         | 
         | All I'd want is an input for an Apple TV and maybe 2 more hdmi
         | plugs. Doesn't even need a remote.
         | 
         | Good luck.
        
           | QIYGT wrote:
           | > input for an Apple TV and maybe 2 more hdmi plugs
           | 
           | Add more input ports than you think anybody could ever want,
           | and I'm in.
        
             | pupdogg wrote:
             | Did AppleTV output change or is it still HDMI?
        
               | girvo wrote:
               | Still HDMI!
        
             | lostlogin wrote:
             | The my rule when running Ethernet, double or quadruple the
             | dose.
        
           | pupdogg wrote:
           | Wait, this Disney lawsuit thing is news to me. What's up with
           | that? You're right, in the consumer market, there's a much
           | higher demand for 32-40" display. Our UHD controller can
           | easily handle that and comes with 5x total input ports [ 3x
           | HDMI(V1.4a), 1x HDMI(V2.0), 1x DisplayPort(V1.2) ] and can
           | run 3840x2160 or 4096x2160 resolutions @ 120Hz.
        
             | dmitrygr wrote:
             | I think he meant that DUMBO is a name of a disney character
        
               | lostlogin wrote:
               | This - sorry, I was being a smart arse.
        
               | pupdogg wrote:
               | Aah, gotcha! Boy, I really overlooked that one. My
               | primary goal was to come up with an easy to remember
               | name/domain that expressed "DUMB TV" and dumbo.tv was
               | available. Oh well, I'll have to rethink that part
               | through a little more.
        
             | jedberg wrote:
             | The name Dumbo. :)
        
             | [deleted]
        
             | debugnik wrote:
             | Edit: Nevermind, apparently they already did claim it.
        
               | kube-system wrote:
               | Huge companies often dabble in a lot of stuff that people
               | don't immediately associate them with, and hold
               | trademarks for those products/services:
               | 
               | https://assets.catawiki.com/image/cw_normal/plain/assets/
               | cat...
        
               | fghsqwads wrote:
               | Just for fun and as a similar example
               | 
               | https://i.kym-
               | cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/002/315/502/f76...
        
               | kube-system wrote:
               | There's apparently a ton of them:
               | 
               | https://i.redd.it/aiahnmp5cd151.jpg
               | 
               | https://media.karousell.com/media/photos/products/2021/7/
               | 14/...
               | 
               | https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/sN0AAOSwMRZilO98/s-l500.jp
               | g
               | 
               | https://s3.amazonaws.com/hopshop-image-store-
               | production/1707...
               | 
               | https://946e583539399c301dc7-100ffa5b52865b8ec92e09e9de9f
               | 4d0...
        
               | monocasa wrote:
               | As has been stated in the thread, Disney has explicitly
               | called out television sets on their trademark application
               | for the term 'Dumbo'.
        
               | ansible wrote:
               | Whoever the TV maker is, do they have better lawyers than
               | Disney? No? Better not to try then.
        
               | bagels wrote:
               | Disney makes character branded tvs. It is not a
               | defensible use of the name.
        
             | [deleted]
        
             | bryanrasmussen wrote:
             | >Wait, this Disney lawsuit thing is news to me. Disney owns
             | a trademark on the name Dumbo
             | https://trademarks.justia.com/779/79/dumbo-77979919.html as
             | well as copyright on the movie Dumbo of course.
             | 
             | I suppose they might think to argue that someone selling
             | televisions with the name Dumbo would be trying to tie
             | their product in with the Disney trademarked product. I
             | don't think that would be considered too much of a stretch
             | so I don't think you would do too well with continuing with
             | that name.
        
             | Buttons840 wrote:
             | Dumbo is a Disney character, every bit as much of a
             | character as Micky Mouse or others, just less popular.
             | 
             | Of course, by the time Disney notices you you'll already
             | have succeeded, but you may be forced to change brand. You
             | can do it now or later.
        
           | schappim wrote:
           | Yeah Disney have the class 9 Trade Mark for Dumbo, and
           | specifically call out: "television sets;"[1][2]. IMNAL, but
           | change the name.
           | 
           | [1] https://search.ipaustralia.gov.au/trademarks/search/view/
           | 115...
           | 
           | [2] https://files.littlebird.com.au/Shared-
           | Image-2023-04-08-06-5...
        
           | tetromino_ wrote:
           | +1. 32" diagonal, 4 HDMI inputs, and you have another
           | customer.
        
             | moonchrome wrote:
             | At that size isn't that basically a monitor ?
        
         | m3kw9 wrote:
         | Classic TV
        
         | aidenn0 wrote:
         | If you have at least an advertised number for input latency in
         | the minimum processing (i.e. "game") mode, that would be nice.
         | Few panels in general advertise this, but many reviews of home
         | TVs will do at least one measurement of it.
         | 
         | A decent consumer LCD panel will be ~12ms@60Hz, with OLED often
         | being faster. If it's over 20ms or so, I struggle on some old
         | NES games.
        
         | max51 wrote:
         | this is the type of monitor I'd buy if the the spec and price
         | was somewhat in range with the rest of the market. I love the
         | idea of single-purpose device in an square metal case that made
         | no compromises for esthetic or to try to fit in a showroom.
         | 
         | It's always frustrating to see manufacturers intentionally make
         | their product worse just to look better in a store. I'm sure
         | I'm not the only one who cares a lot more about image quality,
         | latency, durability, etc. than having a fancy rounded plastic
         | case with a laggy netflix integration.
        
         | babypuncher wrote:
         | * OLED
         | 
         | * eARC
         | 
         | * Dolby Vision and HDR10+
         | 
         | * VRR, preferably with G-Sync and Freesync Premium
         | certification
         | 
         | These are my requirements for a new display, anything that
         | meets them in the pipeline? My biggest problem with existing
         | "dumb TVs" is that they lack features like these, yet cost more
         | than "smart TVs" that do.
        
           | pupdogg wrote:
           | Yes, we support OLEDs and QLEDs as is. However, "Dolby Vision
           | and HDR10+ * VRR, preferably with G-Sync and Freesync" are
           | some new buzz words for me. Are they just marketing buzz
           | words or do they actually translate to physical or software
           | specs for the controller board/firmware?
        
             | babypuncher wrote:
             | VRR is short for variable refresh rate, a feature added
             | with HDMI 2.1.It's useful for video games, as it means they
             | do not have to deliver frames perfectly in sync with the
             | display's fixed refresh rate in order to present a smooth
             | experience. I mention G-Sync/Freesync certification,
             | because it is all too common for VRR-capable displays to
             | only do the bare-minimum to meet the HDMI 2.1 spec
             | otherwise.
             | 
             | Dolby Vision and HDR10+ are newer premium HDR formats.
        
               | pupdogg wrote:
               | I'll talk this over with our firmware designer. I believe
               | most of the things you're asking for come standard as
               | part of the HDMI2.1 spec and the latest spec seems to be
               | HDMI2.1a. As of right now, we are only compliant up to
               | HDMI2.0 due to the nature of our commercial market. They
               | prefer reliability over cutting edge. However, I don't
               | see updating to the new spec as a major issue. High-end
               | FPGAs have really come down in price and have made it
               | much easier to accomplish such tasks due to their high
               | throughput capabilities.
        
               | kmonsen wrote:
               | For gaming consumers you really need 2.1 I believe.
        
             | Bud wrote:
             | [dead]
        
             | dontlaugh wrote:
             | Recent HDR support requires hardware, software and
             | calibration. It looks better.
             | 
             | Variable refresh rate is essential for games, to avoid
             | stuttering at least.
        
         | kjsthree wrote:
         | Keep us updated. I'd likely pay 2x what I payed for my LG C2
         | for a "dumb" version. Even if just to support such a project.
        
           | gigatexal wrote:
           | Yeah I just don't let my smart LG OLED tv connect to the web.
        
           | parker_mountain wrote:
           | Your LG C2 is a dumb tv - if you dont connect it to the
           | internet. You can even buy a $10 IR remote control on amazon
           | and use that to switch inputs. Or, in my experience, all of
           | my external devices support HDMI CEC and auto switch when i
           | use them.
        
             | OneLeggedCat wrote:
             | He said, "Even if just to support such a project"
        
             | kjsthree wrote:
             | This is essentially what I've done. The TV has never been
             | connected to the Internet and my Apple TV drives
             | everything. I would still have payed 2x to support a good
             | dumb TV project and would love to do so in the future.
        
               | Koshkin wrote:
               | But isn't a dumb TV + Apple TV pretty much the same as a
               | smart TV? (I know, you avoid dealing with two "smarts,"
               | but still...)
        
               | kitsunesoba wrote:
               | The Apple TV's hardware is wildly more powerful than that
               | bundled in any smart TV. The current ATV 4K is running on
               | the last gen flagship Apple SoC with a big passive
               | heatsink attached while smart TVs use hardware comparable
               | to that of a low-to-midrange Android phone from
               | 2012-2014. Even the first gen ATV 4K from 2017 is several
               | times more powerful than current smart TVs.
               | 
               | That difference in power is felt quite a lot in the user
               | experience.
        
               | Koshkin wrote:
               | I am not sure if "powerful" matters in this context
               | though. (That is, I expect the chipsets built into TVs to
               | be plenty powerful for their intended purpose.)
        
               | kitsunesoba wrote:
               | In many cases the SoCs used in TVs are so underpowered
               | that they can't render menu screens without frame drops,
               | or if they can they lose that ability after a software
               | update or two because there's so little margin.
        
               | bee_rider wrote:
               | From a security or absolutist point of view, yeah. From a
               | customer point of view -- different companies have
               | different reputations and market positions. We might all
               | disagree about the exact level of faith we have in them,
               | but Apple and Vizio or whoever seem to have different
               | reputations, for whatever that is worth.
        
               | iscrewyou wrote:
               | The irk for smart tvs comes from that fact that they show
               | ads and slow down overtime.
               | 
               | With Apple TV, you can nip that in the bud. Yes, Apple TV
               | has its own quirks but it's nowhere near as hostile as
               | built in "functionality" that these tvs try to provide.
               | 
               | And not say that streaming services have every incentive
               | to keep the Apple TV apps improving compared to the tv
               | app itself.
               | 
               | It's just an overall better experience.
        
               | waboremo wrote:
               | Depends. A Smart TV is a category of TVs being sold. If
               | you go into bestbuy asking for a Smart TV, you're not
               | going to get a TV + streaming box/stick, just a "Smart
               | TV" (although there is some obvious overlap here since TV
               | makers have partnered with Fire TV and Roku).
               | 
               | But when it comes to general conversation (and this
               | context), yes it's the same. Unless you are actually
               | using a niche setup of local streaming and the Apple TV
               | box is just a nice interface you keep offline - don't
               | know how well that works. For everyone else, they are
               | just avoiding overlapping TV services, as relying on
               | Apple or Google or Amazon is falling into the same traps.
        
               | doctor_eval wrote:
               | The problem with smart TVs is that you can't easily
               | disable the offending software if you want to. The
               | software is tightly coupled to the hardware. In some
               | cases it will aggressively search for opportunities to
               | spy on you.
               | 
               | Worst case, Apple jumps the shark... you can just unplug
               | it. You at least get to keep the display.
        
             | bombcar wrote:
             | The Slamsung smart TV I have is fine, but the UI is
             | noticeablely show as shit even with it never connected to
             | anything (just going to settings for example) which is part
             | and parcel of being "smart" I guess.
             | 
             | 99% of the problem with Smart TVs is because of the
             | absolute dog shit UI and the relatively bad HDMI CEC setups
             | they have (at least with mine, if HDMI CEC is on, anytime
             | the TV accidentally or intentionally gets into any of the
             | smart parts, it tells the receiver to go to TV mode, and
             | getting it back to one of the HDMI inputs on the receiver
             | either involves turning everything off, or turning it back
             | repeatedly).
        
               | acchow wrote:
               | I would suggest avoiding Samsung for TVs. LG is miles
               | ahead.
               | 
               | I also have a Hisense Android TV and would avoid any
               | Android TV's.
        
             | mustacheemperor wrote:
             | I have an LGCX and if I hadn't connected it to the internet
             | I would have missed out on some important software updates
             | that significantly improved the display performance.
             | 
             | I guess you can toggle the internet on and off when updates
             | are published, but it's not the most convenient solution.
             | 
             | Edit: But you can use a USB! Woohoo, thank you repliers!
        
               | silisili wrote:
               | Most, if not all, routers have a one click blacklist
               | device option. Pretty easy to just unblock it once a
               | month and check for updates?
               | 
               | Alternatively, for something more automated, you could
               | just use parental control 'bedtime'. I use it currently
               | to keep the kid from watching TV at certain hours. Could
               | probably do the inverse and block it except for an hour
               | on a particular day, I'd imagine.
        
               | addaon wrote:
               | LG (at least for my OLED model) supports firmware updates
               | over USB, and posts firmware updates to their website.
               | It's a very smooth flow -- my years-old TV has never had
               | an internet connection and is up-to-date.
        
               | mustacheemperor wrote:
               | Thank you, and babypuncher, for this advice! I avoid
               | using the tvos but dislike how a parade of web connected
               | ads pop up if I hit the dashboard button by accident.
               | Glad I can airgap it again.
        
               | babypuncher wrote:
               | You can update the firmware on LG TVs with a USB drive,
               | no internet required.
        
             | parker_mountain wrote:
             | > I have an LGCX and if I hadn't connected it to the
             | internet I would have missed out on some important software
             | updates that significantly improved the display
             | performance.
             | 
             | Fwiw toggling the internet is an easy fix compared to the
             | "dumb tv" way of updating firmware - putting a bin on a
             | flash drive.
        
               | bee_rider wrote:
               | I'd tend to assume that any data collected would be
               | uploaded opportunistically whenever an internet
               | connection was available.
        
               | [deleted]
        
               | cfeduke wrote:
               | Most likely. I worked at a political company (eww) that
               | used this data up to two years after it was generated.
               | The historical data is more useful for political markets
               | for advertising issues than near real time since campaign
               | targeting usually needs to be performed or at least
               | planned a few weeks in advance. Near real time is great
               | for message tweaking but knowing whether there's a
               | receptive demographic is historical.
        
               | jrockway wrote:
               | I think you'd have to write a DNS server where you choose
               | what to return NXDOMAIN for. So updates.samsung.com,
               | sure, let it connect, but spying.samsung.com, block.
               | (Obviously, do not allow connections to any IP addresses
               | you haven't yet approved, which you approve by manually
               | retrieving the DNS entries.) This can be defeated with
               | DoH, or by different business units inside the company
               | cooperating to use the same domain for different
               | purposes, or by doing the TLS negotiation with
               | good.samsung.com but setting the Host header to
               | evil.samsung.com, etc. The first is too scary to ship
               | (you have to keep the DoH's IP address and certificate
               | safe forever; I wouldn't sign off on that), and the
               | second made me chuckle as I was typing it.
               | 
               | I'll add that "back in my day" a screen could display the
               | video signal on its inputs without ever needing a
               | software update. But I suppose automatic time zone
               | changes are a reasonable reason that code needs to be
               | pushed post-manufacture. Then again, who needs a clock on
               | their TV?
        
               | bee_rider wrote:
               | I have an unfortunately smart TV, which of I've never
               | connected to the network. In general
               | 
               | * it is effectively dumb to me, so I don't care about
               | feature updates
               | 
               | * it isn't connected to the network, so I don't care
               | about security updates
               | 
               | It hadn't occurred to me that there could be TVs out
               | there that are so "smart" that they can't even take an
               | input without a network connection. Such a device would
               | be returned as defective by me, but of course I can see
               | somebody deciding that packing it all up into the car is
               | too much of a pain.
        
             | [deleted]
        
           | riceart wrote:
           | But would you pay 2x for an industrial panel? These panels
           | might last longer at brighter drive outdoors and in well lit
           | areas but they won't look anywhere near as good as a consumer
           | OLED for viewing movies and gaming because of both panel and
           | processor. Seems like a different (and wrong for this use
           | case) set of priorities. My OLED LG CX is not on the network
           | - the UI is - it's fine, I haven't found the LG UI to be too
           | laggy which is a pet peeve - certainly not annoying enough to
           | throw the amazing panel out.
        
         | atomicfiredoll wrote:
         | I would love to keep tabs on this. I'm sure it would interest
         | redditors at r/privacy too.
         | 
         | I've often though about going for something like a Sharp/NEC
         | Display, because I often use my T.V. as a PC monitor and want
         | to be sure it's not phoning home, but the idea of being able to
         | slide in a compute module is also generally interesting. One of
         | the things that always stops me is the quality and
         | responsiveness. It would still be in my living room, so I still
         | want a nice picture and features like variable refresh rate for
         | devices like a PS5.
        
         | noman-land wrote:
         | Please definitely 100% do this. I hope it makes you a
         | billionaire.
        
         | Moto7451 wrote:
         | So I have had to suffer being given the gift of my neighbor, an
         | AV-file, setting up a home theater style setup. Personally I'm
         | not super happy with what he did. I have a full size rack meant
         | to be filled with electronics I don't want, and hundreds of
         | feet of wire to locate said rack to a closet so there is no
         | entertainment unit under the TV.
         | 
         | All of this is overkill in my opinion. However... I think this
         | is a core market for you. Between the Enthusiasts on Reddit and
         | the home theater market there are a lot of people that would
         | appreciate a highly tunable screen where they can have their AV
         | closet run the show without Samsung, Google, or Roku in the
         | way.
         | 
         | One of the most painful parts of my install was getting an HDMI
         | Balun that would operate in 4:4:4 color space, provide 7.2 ARC,
         | provide CEC, and provide IR... and work reliably. This is a
         | tall ask because it's supposed to use CAT6 between the ends.
         | The expense of these units was high (300-500) and the
         | reliability wasn't great. A lot of the reason for this pain is
         | the idea that you can upgrade later without running a new set
         | of wires. Ultimately I said screw it and ran an optical HDMI
         | cable (and am very happy).
         | 
         | You would really engage with this market if you integrated this
         | functionality into your TV so you only needed to run a cable
         | and attach the receiver side Balun. I don't know where the pain
         | came from but this feels like something that the native TV
         | hardware could expose over a cable. Some people have Toslink
         | run through their walls as well which would be a good option to
         | support as well.
        
           | pupdogg wrote:
           | You're right, extenders can be expensive, but they can save
           | you a lot of trouble if you choose the right one. My go-to
           | choice is Atlona, especially this one:
           | https://atlona.com/product/at-ome-ex-wp-kit-lt/. The best
           | part is that the destination end is powered by PoE, so you
           | get active conversion all the time. We've used these very
           | reliably (I would say they are industrial-grade) for the past
           | 10 years.
           | 
           | We do have a few LCD controller boards that support IP TV,
           | but the downside is that they use 264/MPEG-4 AVC compression
           | for transport.
        
         | donohoe wrote:
         | I'm all for non-smart TVs and have gone that route through not
         | hooking up internet.
         | 
         | That said, I think there is a middle-ground here.
         | 
         | If its within your capacity, I'd consider allowing a USB
         | connection. If I were able to attach a USB thumb-drive or an
         | external hard-drive (powered though USB connection) and the TV
         | provide a basic visual navigation system.
         | 
         | The nearest comparison is something like the current Roku USB
         | app, or a more basic version of the Infuse App
         | (https://firecore.com/), the library structure is a reflection
         | of the file-system. I'll skip the details where a dedicated
         | user can set the cover image for a given video by having a
         | image filer with the same name as a companion to the MP4 etc...
         | 
         | I know that would be a huge jump, but I'd pay for it.
        
           | Retr0id wrote:
           | Wouldn't it be better to have that functionality provided via
           | a plug-in TV stick?
        
           | 9dev wrote:
           | That's straight back in smart territories, and precisely not
           | what I want. Just give me something that shows what it
           | receives via HDMI. Give me two inputs I can switch over,
           | maybe. That's it.
        
           | tremon wrote:
           | And which file formats and filesystems should that USB
           | connection support? Should it support next-year's H269
           | format? Who will provide firmware updates to add new video
           | formats?
           | 
           | That's my main objection to many of these all-in-one systems:
           | the built-in technology support will be obsoleted before the
           | rest of the system fails due to old age. I much prefer a dumb
           | TV with a separate media box/dongle that I can replace with a
           | new model every year to paying for a TV with soon-to-be-stale
           | features.
        
         | ianai wrote:
         | Is like a "null" branding instead of "dumb" for what it's
         | worth. A Null TV sounds techy.
        
         | gnicholas wrote:
         | Sounds great! What price point are you aiming for? Will this be
         | much more expensive than inexpensive Samsungs/Vizios that are
         | subsidized by data collection?
        
           | pupdogg wrote:
           | I haven't done much market research in that aspect yet but we
           | currently sell our industrial 70" display @ around $9-12k/ea
           | depending on the configuration (ie type of metal shell
           | aluminum/stainless/carbon-steel, ethernet support, protective
           | polycarbonate screen in the front to prevent damage from
           | industrial machinery). However, I expect the consumer grade
           | to be much more cost effective considering the sizes in
           | demand would are much smaller (32-40"). Since I have more
           | experience in sheet metal design/fabrication for the
           | enclosures, I still plan on building these TVs inside a metal
           | shell (specifically aluminum) instead of a plastic housing
           | like your standard Samsungs/Vizios. I'm open to market
           | consensus as to what is the most favorable price point for
           | the size.
        
             | corrigible wrote:
             | will they retail globally?
        
               | pupdogg wrote:
               | We ship globally to our customers right now but I believe
               | having a distribution channel for global retail would be
               | much wiser. I'm definitely open to it once we get to that
               | point.
        
         | d0mine wrote:
         | - PrivateTV (only you know what you are watching, or talking in
         | front of tv) - yourTV (you own TV. It doesn't own you. You are
         | not the product--it is.) - dumbTV (smart choice)
        
         | alistairSH wrote:
         | Another "YES PLEASE!" here. In something in the 50" size range.
         | Gotta for it on existing furniture in a small-ish family room.
        
         | schappim wrote:
         | You're going to want to change that name... Disney... They have
         | the class 9 Trade Mark for Dumbo, and call out: "television
         | sets;"[1][2].
         | 
         | [1]
         | https://search.ipaustralia.gov.au/trademarks/search/view/115...
         | 
         | [2] https://files.littlebird.com.au/Shared-
         | Image-2023-04-08-06-5...
        
           | pupdogg wrote:
           | Yes, going to take care of that. Thanks for the heads up. I
           | really looked that one over...didn't think too much of it as
           | the domain was available. It's hard to do anything the easy
           | way nowadays!
        
             | TylerE wrote:
             | What about something a bit more...positive? PureTV?
        
               | xen2xen1 wrote:
               | Taken for a product that bleeps out cuss words IIRC.
        
               | larrywright wrote:
               | This sounds a little too close to PureFlix, which is a
               | streaming service for family friendly/religious content.
        
               | gpm wrote:
               | Or SimplyTV
        
               | TylerE wrote:
               | Yeah, that was one of my first thoughts, but I figure
               | SimpliSafe probably owns the trademark for household
               | electronics.
        
               | ryandrake wrote:
               | JusTV
        
               | ufo wrote:
               | Perhaps too close to justin.tv (aka Amazon(r))
        
               | tanelpoder wrote:
               | Basic.tv
               | 
               | Edit: as in you have to code BASIC to change the channel
        
             | lagrange77 wrote:
             | How about IDIOT? Edit: Damn, there is 'IOT' in it.
        
               | lagrange77 wrote:
               | PRIMITV
        
               | mholt wrote:
               | I would buy a good offline TV called "Primitv" in an
               | instant
        
               | taftster wrote:
               | Oh, that's just beautiful. You're hired.
        
               | askvictor wrote:
               | That's really nice. Though there's a _slight_ chance that
               | Amazon's lawyers might come knocking due to the
               | similarity of Prime (TV?).
        
               | q7xvh97o2pDhNrh wrote:
               | Nice. That is an absurdly good name.
               | 
               | I think it needs just a bit of fool-proofing in a couple
               | dimensions though:
               | 
               | (1) Ideally, the brand would also be able to speak to the
               | segment of people who aren't going to get the wordplay.
               | 
               | (2) Also, there's the age-old pronunciation question. Is
               | it just "Primitive"? Is it "Primi - Tee - Vee"?
               | 
               | It's quite close to being a great brand, though. I wonder
               | if it just needs a skillfully-placed lowercase letter, or
               | a couple dots, or something -- maybe some sort of subtle
               | variation could solve both problems.
        
               | dllthomas wrote:
               | The IDIOT TV IDs the viewers with IOT technology :D
        
               | Koshkin wrote:
               | But who/what are you calling "idiot" and why? I would
               | never think of calling that a plain HDTV set - it is
               | still a technological marvel (and also would have all
               | kinds of "smarts" built in anyway, just no apps or wifi).
        
               | Godel_unicode wrote:
               | Calling the version with no smarts "idiot" seems pretty
               | clever to me.
        
             | neandrake wrote:
             | Haven't checked availability but OnlyTV would be fitting.
        
             | scrollaway wrote:
             | It's a great name for a non-smart tv, to be honest. But
             | Disney'll be Disney. Good luck.
        
             | hexnuts wrote:
             | Unhooked.Tech is one suggestion. That way if you want to
             | expand into other devices / spaces, it is already covered.
        
             | muyuu wrote:
             | maybe something like dumb.box ? I think the .box suffix
             | might be very appropriate, something like brainless.box or
             | whatever, I know it's unconventional though, perhaps .tv is
             | better
        
               | hsbauauvhabzb wrote:
               | I live self deprecating humour but it negatively affects
               | me at work, I imagine dumb.tv or idiot.tv may have
               | similar problems. But maybe also you go viral because of
               | it, who knows.
        
             | exclusiv wrote:
             | Suggestion: STANDARD
        
               | suprjami wrote:
               | Terrible. Imagine searching for "standard TV".
        
             | philistine wrote:
             | Might I recommend DUMBY?
        
           | wyldfire wrote:
           | Probably best to avoid the conflict, per your advice. But if
           | they're not really using the mark that way I doubt it's
           | enforceable.
        
         | dogma1138 wrote:
         | How will you be dealing with movie content? 24fps content is
         | quite hard to display without proper processing especially on
         | large screens when the telesync judder will be noticeable.
         | 
         | Also HDR support and DRM will be quite problematic.
        
           | pupdogg wrote:
           | I'm not too sure about this. I use AppleTV with our
           | industrial display playing back HDR content without any
           | issues. Here's a 4K video playing via AppleTV on a 16ft x 9ft
           | indoor display at our facility: https://imgur.com/a/3O58O8T
        
             | dogma1138 wrote:
             | Are you sure you are actually playing HDR content? The
             | AppleTV will output 1080 SDR content or even below that
             | too...
             | 
             | Do these displays support HDCP? Are they locked at 60 or
             | 30hz refresh rates?
             | 
             | There is a reason why computer monitors make really poor
             | display devices for multimedia content.
        
               | pupdogg wrote:
               | Majority of our customers use our displays for Digital
               | Signage so I would assume we would've heard of their
               | issues if they couldn't playback their 4k or 8k content.
               | Some of them play this content back on videowalls, as
               | large as 14x8 configuration, without any issues. I will
               | double-check with our firmware designer to be sure. From
               | what I know, I believe HDCP is supported by all versions
               | of HDMI. Older TVs, specifically the ones without HDMI
               | input (i.e. component, vga, rca or coax input), wouldn't
               | be able to support this. Majority of our current
               | controllers are compliant with HDMI2.0 spec. Someone else
               | here asked about HDMI2.1a and I'm going to get an answer
               | on that from our firmware designer this weekend.
        
               | riceart wrote:
               | HDCP is separate from HDMI. You can be spec compliant
               | with HDMI at any version and not support HDCP. That said
               | I would be surprised that a display controller in common
               | use would not support HDCP.
               | 
               | 4K or 8K content sure, but what about HDR? Especially at
               | sizes less than 40" that's more important than res for
               | viewing content.
        
               | dogma1138 wrote:
               | Signage displays do not need to display protected
               | content, they do not need to support standards like
               | DolbyVision and they do not need to support three-two
               | pull-down to display cinematic content without judder.
               | 
               | HDCP isn't supported on all versions of HDMI it's not
               | part of the spec it is a standard that is supported on
               | top of w/e display interface you are using.
        
         | csmattryder wrote:
         | How much are you expecting this to weigh? Industrial/retail
         | signage panels can weigh a tonne, especially at 65-90".
         | 
         | Also, will this be one of Samsung's signage panels (e.g. QBR
         | range)? I was always impressed with the nits on those.
        
         | rglullis wrote:
         | Is there any chance whatsoever that you can use open source
         | software/firmware for it?
         | 
         | I am not in the market for a TV and I am only a hobbyist with a
         | tendency to spend more than I should on anything that lets me
         | open the hood and tinker with it. If there is any consumer
         | electronics company that wants to be the anti-Apple, I'd
         | support it in any possible way.
         | 
         | Seriously, I even wonder if there could be some type of
         | "Patreon-based" R&D for consumer eletronics. Get a group of
         | software and industrial engineers to design and build all sorts
         | of different projects, and patreons would get access to early
         | prototypes and would be able to "buy" the finished products at
         | cost.
        
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