looks a pretty good spec for entry level. Smart, built in WiFi, 3 HDMI. looks like a decent and huge set at a very cheap price
soled73
12 Aug 16#3
Also includes NOW TV Sky Sports Pass for1 Week
Rusty82
12 Aug 16#4
Can't seem to find a detailed spec list anywhere, anyone know:
Does it have,
HDMI 2.0 ports?
USB 3.0?
HEVC decoding?
kevinc6784
12 Aug 16#5
Not a good price now with no HDR. Better options out there now, but if you can wait till Black Friday or Christmas you will find much better 2016 HDR Samsung's at around this price.
saxet212 to kevinc6784
12 Aug 16#6
what's the difference between HD and HDR please?
houston26 to kevinc6784
12 Aug 161#10
it does have hdr, but it's an 8 bit panel, so you get some of the benefits but not the full detail.
smiler594 to kevinc6784
16 Aug 16#21
Agreed, I picked up a 65 inch JS9000 for this price, albeit it was ex display. Unbelievable deal
DelBoy_Tr0tt3r
12 Aug 16#7
These TV's are ok if you're new to 4K but I would be very wary about spending so much on a 4K tv that isn't up to the recent agreed standard and HDR ready.
DelBoy_Tr0tt3r
12 Aug 161#8
HD (High Definition) is just the resolution such as1920 x 1080p which is the highest for HD, where as HDR (High Dynamic Range) improves the colour and detail in the picture quality and will make fast paced content much better, so complements 4K well.
abigsmurf
12 Aug 162#9
HD = high definition, talking about the number of pixels you get on the screen.
HDR = High dynamic range talks about how Televisions display colour.
When you get a normal television picture, the colours are displayed exactly as the colours are captured by the camera. Cameras tend to capture colours much more evenly compared to the human eye and TVs then displays it with a similar level of flatness.
This results in duller colours and/or dark/black areas where all the detail is lost depending on how you adjust your TV.
With HDR filters are applied to the picture that rather than applying blanket contrast and saturation settings to the whole image, it applies it selectively across the image, taking into account how the eye sees colours. You can see more detail in dark areas without needing to make blacks look washed out and colours appear more vivid without being unrealistic or overbright.
HDR also increases the number of colours that can be displayed by the TV (more detail, less 'banding').
SaltyCDogg
12 Aug 16#11
HDR improves colour and contrast (which will improve perception of detail in some scenes), but it shouldn't make any difference to motion.
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All comments (24)
Entry level
Does it have,
HDMI 2.0 ports?
USB 3.0?
HEVC decoding?
HDR = High dynamic range talks about how Televisions display colour.
When you get a normal television picture, the colours are displayed exactly as the colours are captured by the camera. Cameras tend to capture colours much more evenly compared to the human eye and TVs then displays it with a similar level of flatness.
This results in duller colours and/or dark/black areas where all the detail is lost depending on how you adjust your TV.
With HDR filters are applied to the picture that rather than applying blanket contrast and saturation settings to the whole image, it applies it selectively across the image, taking into account how the eye sees colours. You can see more detail in dark areas without needing to make blacks look washed out and colours appear more vivid without being unrealistic or overbright.
HDR also increases the number of colours that can be displayed by the TV (more detail, less 'banding').