Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Mini Ditka wrote:
One of the main reasons that HDTVs are overrated is because they are overpriced and then not worth much when you try to resell.
Do you often resell your televisions?
Mini Ditka wrote:
However, you have to splurge that extra money for HD cable service when honestly if you don't splurge for the extra money the 10-year-old standard def TV is going to make the standard def cable look just as good and in some cases better.
Why would anyone ever buy a HDTV and not get HDTV?
Wouldn't that be like buying a video game system and not buying any games for it?
Mini Ditka wrote:
Gaming is certainly a reason to get one, but you're still looking at a serious investment of money for games and systems. As far as Blu-Ray goes those are more expensive than all the other discs and the least repairable when scratched. Plus the Blu-Ray players are expensive.
So the problem with this product is that it costs money?
I'm not necessarily going to sell my TV, but I don't want to feel like it's worth half the money because I opened the box.
People are dumb when it comes to HDTV. Some people thought they needed a converter box for their HDTVs. Plus if you have cable the HD stream hogs all your bandwidth. For example some DVRs can record 4 SD streams, but only 2 HD streams.
Yes, the problem is money. You waste money on the expensive TV that is smaller from top to bottom than the square one you could get for free. You pay on average $300 to $500 in additional cable costs per year to satisfy your HD needs. Then, you have to splurge on all the extra equipment (consoles and Blu-Ray players and discs) and the thing is probably not going to last more than 5 to 10 years when you'll be ready to blow another $500. If you throw in all the time you spend watching the thing you'll realize you've blown thousands of dollars.