It's increasingly common for smart TVs to require an active internet connection to do anything.Can’t you simply not connect these things to the internet?
I just connect my appletv to my tv. I am hoping that apple continues to derive enough profit from not selling my data that I can feel comfortable using their products.
When that changes… dunno.
That isn't really an old man rant. You have just described my experience watching TV since I was in my early forties. And I am someone who grew up helping my dad build a Heathkit TV. Installing that flyback transformer on the neck of the CRT was quite challenging.i'm not that old. but getting up there.
have not bought any smart tvs, and refuse to
get any, especially with AI or cameras.
i only use old ones, like samsung, and they usually
have remotes that are basic, and i can use them properly.
my parents have a newer 4K tv with all the bells and whistles,
i have yet to figure out how to use it, the cable box, and
bose surround sound. there's at least 3 separate remotes,
various options that need to be fiddled with, separate volume
control etc.
WE LITERALLY have a printed out step by step instruction sheet
near the tv, anytime we need to watch stuff, and then even more
when playing a bluray or dvd disc.
i like the flexibility and fancy features. but its ridiculous how all
this stuff works or doesn't work.
and if you hit a wrong button one of them, and everything gets
messed up, or there's no sound. or you plugged in the bluray
player at the wrong time, it doesn't detect it.. YIKES, and then
you have to go through all the steps again to get it working.
i personally don't care or need 1080p tvs, 720p is fine, but they
have pretty much vanished. so i can live with the older basic
tvs. i have about 10 of them (donated by friends who have all
replaced all their tvs with newer ones), all over the house.
i even multiplexed 4xtvs to make one larger one. running it through
a pc, and an NVIDIA card to montage the image. all the other
are various media players, as i actually don't watch tv, and have
never subscribed to a service, or ever had cable either.
its all, vhs, laserdisc, dvd, bluray, and digital for viewing, along
with youtube, and free online streams.
i could also use monitors i guess, but they cost more. they are
a lot easier to use though. power on, and select input (even
have autodetect). and volume buttons.
I HATE tvs that only have touch interfaces, and no physical buttons on.
if you lose the remote, or it breaks, you basically have a big slab until
you can find a replacement one that works with it.
end old man rant....
They're called "commercial displays" not professional monitors (there's really no such thing as a 'professional monitor' - either you need a monitor with really good color reproduction/high resolution or not). Basically they're the screens you see hosting dynamic menus and the arrival/departure screens at airports. Thing is, they're very expensive. What it makes obvious, however, is just how much a "TV" from any manufacturer is being subsidized with the sort of crapware/intrusive advertising we users used to berate PC OEMs for.Look for professional monitors.
NOT TV's.
You can buy 'service remotes' for LGs for about $10 that have just about every button imaginable. They can be used to invoke service mode to change settings you can't normally reach, but most people don't need that. All those buttons are sure nice, though, like instant input switchers.I haven't read all the posts here yet so this may be redundant but...
I got a new LG OLED over the summer. My previous TV was also an LG OLED and I can say without reservation that LG's new remote and interface is terrible. It's incredibly annoying and unintuitive. One of the worst consumer UIs I've yet to come across. Really, really bad
Ninja'd by Deelron.+1 for dumb TVs, it solves the most problems in modern TVs.
Also will there just be a single large button on the US version of the remote for Fox News? (I kid)
Sadly I've also found (some) of these commercial displays to be loaded with crapware too. I was installing a Samsung one in a conference room at my job last year, and the menu that thing had was infuriating. It kept trying to register inputs to specific devices and doing other weird things, rather than just having a simple dumb menu for selecting your input. Though that seems par for the course with all Samsung software these days, no matter the device.They're called "commercial displays" not professional monitors (there's really no such thing as a 'professional monitor' - either you need a monitor with really good color reproduction/high resolution or not). Basically they're the screens you see hosting dynamic menus and the arrival/departure screens at airports. Thing is, they're very expensive. What it makes obvious, however, is just how much a "TV" from any manufacturer is being subsidized with the sort of crapware/intrusive advertising we users used to berate PC OEMs for.
However, a monitor is not a TV, not traditionally, not now. A TV has OTA (ATSC/PAL/NTSC/DVB) reception capability along with other features oriented for traditional boob-tube viewing including an native interlaced display mode. Monitors are designed to be the VDT of a computer with features required for that specific environment. Interlaced video is blurry because computers are progressive scan and do not provide an interlaced mode on modern hardware.
Edit to add: I dispise tone deaf marketing and stereotyping like LG is doing with this product. Every senior I know, and that's increasingly including myself despite not quite retirement age having a tech job, wants simple interfaces, no crap or adware, DUMB appliances that are easy and intuitive, NOT computerized BS that will be obsolete soon as its home or serving up unwanted ads because some stupidly rich amoral CEO wants another highrise penthouse for his second mistress that he's cheating on his first mistress AND his wife.
You can buy 'service remotes' for LGs for about $10 that have just about every button imaginable. They can be used to invoke service mode to change settings you can't normally reach, but most people don't need that. All those buttons are sure nice, though, like instant input switchers.
The UI will remain unchanged, but you may be able to skip past some of it by using the dedicated buttons.
I needed to replace a dead TV so I decided to go the commercial display route. It was frustrating just trying to decide what to buy because they don't give you many specs on the commercial models. And reviews are all but non-existent.Sadly I've also found (some) of these commercial displays to be loaded with crapware too.
Assuming you mean the types of large screen displays that are used in conference rooms for computer output and in hotels, etc. for message display - as others noted, they are expensive to very expensive. They also have poorer picture quality than high end TVs, since clarity and brightness are generally their goal rather than fidelity. I’d like a dumb monitor with a panel equivalent to a current high end LG OLED (and might be willing to pay a premium for it), but the best I’ve figured out is to get the TV and not connect it to the net. I haven’t used a tuner in a long time, but I’m close to convincing my noble leader that we should get rid of our (cable equivalent) live streaming service, in which case being able to use a tuner so she could get locals would be helpful.Look for professional monitors.
NOT TV's.
Is it, though? Does AppleTV work without an Inet connection? All I want is OTA, other stuff I'll watch on my computer, which has a large monitor.The real answer is to get one with a panel you like and attach an AppleTV.
Hmm, sounds like every single TV that existed before 2010.Exactly this. Something that can turn the tv on and off, change the channel, adjust the volume + mute, and a way to cycle through favorite channels. That's it.
I don't know. He didn't mention switching inputs so how far back are we going? Do I have to put it to channel 3 or 2? JkingHmm, sounds like every single TV that existed before 2010.
Can we go back? This timeline needs a rewind.
Isn't that a computer monitor?I was out on my bike today, and just thinking about the market for a dumb TV. I would be willing to pay 10 or 20% more just to get an 'appliance' with some input connectors. I'm just not sure how big the market would be, but I would pay extra.
A dumb TV would be cheaper, too,
Now there's a smart TV feature worth paying money for.The ability to secretly limit the max volume on the speakers from the tv
I feel really bad suggesting this NOW (because it's almost certainly too little, too late), but if you replaced your old LG TV with a new LG TV and thought the remote on the old one was better, you probably could've kept that old remote and used it with the new TV.I got a new LG OLED over the summer. My previous TV was also an LG OLED and I can say without reservation that LG's new remote and interface is terrible. It's incredibly annoying and unintuitive. One of the worst consumer UIs I've yet to come across. Really, really bad
Bingo.I'm not sure TVs for "seniors" need to be dumbed down to the level LG thinks, nor to have everything crammed into a limited number of buttons on a remote.
An octogenarian in 2025 was in their 40s in the mid-1980s. They were probably running a stacked Hi-Fi system with tape decks, a CD with disc changer, a turntable, a physical equalizer, and dedicated radio. That setup probably had enough knobs and buttons to send a Gen-Zer screaming and running in the opposite direction.
What they want is determinism. No software doing weird things, no popups, no menus piled five layers deep. Just buttons that do a thing. And if there are lots of things to do, there will be lots of buttons. What those buttons do shouldn't change based on context, or change due to software updates. There should be a direct connection between action and response that is well-defined and easily understood.
In fact, count me in for that too.
Apple makes money by selling you an iPhone, iPod or Mac. And they will happily sell you anything that makes you buy the next money making device from Apple.Can’t you simply not connect these things to the internet?
I just connect my appletv to my tv. I am hoping that apple continues to derive enough profit from not selling my data that I can feel comfortable using their products.
When that changes… dunno.
Who the fuck comes up with these names?I got a Samsung LH55BEDHLGFXGO, and it's not great.
Someone at Samsung probably maintains an 1800 page schema document describing exactly how to parse them and how to create new ones.Who the fuck comes up with these names?
I think they meant commercial/professional displays, not monitors. NEC has a line of such displays like Sharp/NEC's:I like the idea in concept, but looking at (for example) B&H Photo for professional video monitors, it seems like the panel sizes are topping out at about 31" and that will cost you over $30k.
Maybe a good computer monitor would do the trick.