The Pro's and Con's of: buying a "Smart TV"
Wednesday, November 6, 2013 at 9:35AM
Corey Herscu in LG, Lifestyle, Samsung, Sharp, Smart TV, Sony, TV

If any of you follow my technological meanderings, you'll know I also write about technology for Toronto-based Notable.ca, the website run by - and made for - young professionals. Last week I posted about my time using a monstrous 80" Smart TV from Sharp and it had me thinking: rather than regurgitating my work, site to site, why not take some of my posts on other sites and turn them into something creative here? So I am. Starting today, I am going to write a quick, easy to use, pros and cons post focused on emerging and innovative technologies that I get to spend time with.  Something you can use as a cheat sheet; print it out and take with you the next time you're shopping for said product. 

So, let's hope right into it: the pros and cons of buying a "Smart TV"

Smart TV's are all the rage right now. Everywhere you go, be it retail stores or home-focused tradeshows, each company is pushing their own iteration of what they consider to be smart and why it's better than the competition. But, is "Smart" really as smart as you're expecting when dropping several thousand on the TV?

Let's take a look at a few stand out prose and cons of owning a Smart TV:

The Pros:

- Eradicates the need for Apple TV or other third party streaming services: all Smart TV's have native access to Netflix, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and most other social media services.

- Looks great in the living room (size permitting, obviously), media room, or boardroom 

- High pixel density of LCD allows for comfortable viewing from even the closest of distances (it's recommended that viewers watch from 1.2 meters away minimum).

- Split screen mode enables the TV for use as a computer monitor as well, perfect for mutli-tasking

 

The Cons:

- 'Smart' isn't defined very clearly; the TV's are hard to get adjusted to and are not intuitive. Smart insinuates that the hardware learns from your usage and adjusts itself to make life easier; Smart TV's do not do this. 

- Menus are clunky and not the easiest to navigate through... even for mundane tasks as connecting the TV to WiFi. There are just too many steps. 

- Pricing; TV's, akin to other forms of technology, get old fast. Often it's hard to justify spending over a few thousand dollars for a TV that will be outdated within months of launch.

 

Overall: the need comes down to personal preference and budget, and of course, actual need. Do your research and due-diligence before taking the plunge!

 

Article originally appeared on Reviews, News and Opinion with a Canadian Perspective (https://www.canadianreviewer.com/).
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