Saturday, June 21, 2014

How do I connect to Netflix/Youtube/Pandora on my Blu Ray player?




Amburrrrr


I just got an LG blu ray player...the LG BDP620 and it says that it is pandora/Netflix/Youtube/Huluplus compatible but I can't for the life of me figure out how to do it! I've gone to the LG Apps center and when I search, they don't come up. Any tips??


Answer
First you have to get the BluRay player connected to your home network. Run a Cat6 network cable from your router to the player or if the player has wireless, use it.

Sometimes you have to buy the optional 'dongle' to get a player to become wireless.

If yours is like this - do NOT buy the wireless dongle. It will run you about $80-$90.

Instead - go to BestBuy and purchase a Western Digital TV Live box for $99. Get a inexpensive HDMI cable (like the Media Bridge brand for $9-$20 from Amazon) to hook it up to your TV.

This little box gives you about 30 different apps and does not cost much more than the wireless dongle which might give you ... 8 apps? It is a much better device, gives you more apps, gets updated more frequently and lets you play computer video files from a USB flash drive.

Trust me - I did the $90 dongle for my Bluray player and it works, but the WD box works much better.

Hope this helps.

How can I get Netflix on my Samsung Blu Ray Player ?







I have a Samsung BD-P 1590, and I updated to the latest firmware but all I have is YouTube, if anyone knows how to get Netflix please let me know.


Answer
Netflix should be built in to your player. When the unit is "Stop Mode" press the Green(B) button on your remote. This should bring up the Netflix initialization interface. If this does not work you will need to contact customer support.




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Do I have to get the same Blu Ray player as the TV?




Skylar J


I was shopping around for a very good 3D Blu Ray Player that i can us with the 3D TV I'm about to get. However I was reading the reviews of the Samsung 3D Blu Ray Player D7500. And allot of the reveiws are saying it doesn't play Blu rays or DVD's and Samsung didn't know what was wrong with it. So I was wondering if it mattered or not if I went Sony or whichever? Reason I ask is because I noticed that what ever TV people have they have the same brand Blu Ray. So could any of you help? I was hoping to buy a Blu Ray player that could make 2D look 3D.


Answer
Any Blu Ray DVD will work.. By the way, I have seen a lot of 'bad' Sony players. I use an LG, and it makes regular DVD's look better, as well as HDTV DVD's, and CD's for music.. HDTV DVD's will play in 1080p, which looks the best.. All TV stations broadcast in 1080i or 720p if they have multi-channels.

Is the New Samsung Blu Ray Player 3D compatible to a Mitsubishi 3D Ready TV?




CESAR G


Hello,
Is the Samsung BD-C6900 able to connect to a Mitsubishi WD-82737 3d
ready? I have read a few reviews from previous buyers on amazon.com
regarding these two products for some reason they do not respond correctly. Please advise if this is
compatible...or even true I tried calling Samsung but they said they no issues have been reported...



Answer
Edit: I have reviewed the manual for the 82737, and it is as I thought.

>> "To display 3D images, Mitsubishi Home Theater DLP TVs require that source devices support checkerboard display formats for 3D gaming or 3D cinema content. A 3D standard format does not currently exist for Blu-ray or DVD prepackaged media. Future 3D standards may be incompatible with Mitsubishi Home Theater DLP TVs. Please visit mitsubishi-tv.com for updates and information."

Basically the TV was made before the BDA 3D standard, so unless the 3D video output is in the old DLP checkerboard format, it will not be compatible.

- - -

The issue here is that the WD-82737 TV is not actually "3D Ready".

What do I mean by this?
This TV was designed and manufactured before there was a well defined 3D standard, it was called "3D Ready" because it was capable of displaying 3D content and used the 3D video format that was commonly accepted at the time.

While the TV was designed to display 3D content, the format for the 3D video it was designed for is completely different to the video format that the Blu-Ray Disc Association has designed for new 3D compatible TVs, Blu-Ray disc players and other hardware.

So to get to the point here... this TV is not at all designed to work with the new 3D standard, so it is effectively not 3D Ready.

I have heard from unconfirmed sources that Mitsubishi might be developing an adapter of sorts that will connect between the Blu-Ray player and the TV to convert the 3D video format to one which the TV can interpret and display, but I don't know if this is really the case.

It's also possible the Blu-Ray player has an additional option to output 3D video in a format which the Mitsubishi TV can understand, but I have no idea if it does or not and that would be outside the scope of the Blu-Ray Disc association specification requirements for manufacturers (i.e. it would be entirely optional and up to the manufacturer).




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Need help connecting a video game console to blu ray player?




Blehh ! xD


So we had an old DVD player which has the yellow, white, & red cables for video games & stuff in the front. Well my parents bought a blu ray player I don't know what model or whatever it is I just know it's panosonic. So I was in the mood for playing video games so I looked in the back of the blu ray player & it had the three cable input things so I connected the A / V cables to it then I turned on the blu ray player & it just had the home screen like of nothing was connected does anyone know how to fix this? Thanks
*panasonic
I found out what model it is:
Panasonic DMP-BDT220



Answer
No, you can't.

How to read ps3 original games from a external Blu-ray player?




Jean-Paul


Hi,
My Ps3 Blu-ray player don't work any more. I think it his the motor that turn the disk. When I put my ear on the Ps3, I can hear the lens trying to move, and the blue light stay on, don't blink, but nothing come to the menu. Also no erroe from the PS3.
My question is: Can I read original games, that I bot, from a external Blu-ray driver (on usb) and play from it. Or from my PC via network. I do have on my pc a Blu-ray driver.
Thank you to answer.



Answer
I don't really think this is possible. Is your PS3 still under warranty? You shall get it repaired for free;.

Also, try the same game in other consoles, from a friend, or other games in your console. It might also be the disc is scratched or dirty, or even your PS3 inside lens are dirty. Anyway send it to repair ASAP.




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Friday, June 20, 2014

Ultra-portable with Blu-Ray?




Matthew


Maybe what I am looking for doesn't exist but I figure I will ask. I am looking for a

1) Ultra-portable laptop (<12" screen)
2) Windows 7 (preferably x64)
3) Internal Blu-Ray drive
4) Weighs less than 4 lbs.

Anyone know if what I am looking for exists? Thanks in advance!



Answer
VPCZ1190X Configure-to-Order

Intel® Core⢠i5-540M processor (2.53GHz) with Turbo Boost up to 3.06GHz
Genuine Windows® 7 Home Premium 64-bit
128GB (128GBx1) Solid State Drive with RAID 0 Technology
4GB (4GBx1) DDR3-SDRAM-1066
Blu-ray Disc⢠Player/Burner
http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/SYCTOProcess?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&LBomId=8198552921666065650&categoryId=8198552921644569398

not sure this qualifies, as screen is 13.1", but weighs sub 3.2 lbs. & config ^ leaves you $2,400 lighter
& in as far as blu-ray on a sub 12" screen system > i have not been able to locate any such system ... personally sounds a bit tricky to me, this build

why does blu-ray not work on my portable dvd player?




Sabrina


when i put it in it just says no disc


Answer
Because Blu-Ray isn't DVD..... That's why they sell Blu-Ray players AND DVD players.
Blu-Ray discs need a different kind of laser, and store information differently.
The good news is that Blu-Ray players play both Blu-Ray discs and DVDs.




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INSIGNA Blu Ray player remote?




peru_jhona


I bought a blu ray insigna and rented a movie, the preview played fine but when I try playing the movie with the play button on the player I got a signal on the screen that said prohibit and a cicle with a cross... I don't understand and I don't have a remote. what can I do other than buy a $60 universal blur ray remote control


Answer
That signal will appear if you press play/skip too early. Try waiting until the FBI warning is done or after the previews.

Try going onto the Best Buy website (see link below). Find your model # and see if they have spare remotes - I've bought one on there for a remote I lost and it only cost about $15 but I'm sure the costs can vary.

how to use blu ray player without remote?




Tommy


i have a samsung BD-P 1590 blue ray player.. but i lost the remote... now i wanna know if theres any other way i can use it without.. maybe an app for android or iphone? can i connect a mouse to it? a bluetooth mouse perhaps? any solutions will do thanks


Answer
You can not connect your iphone to the player and control the operation of the player. Most players have a manual control on the unit itself. Your owners manual will also provide the proper operation. Hope this will help you out.




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How do you make a Sony BDP-S580 3D Blu-ray Disc Player with Wi-Fi region free?




say_what





Answer
You can not make your current Blu Ray disc player into a universal player. There are only a handful of players that is in the market today. Pioneer Elite (around $400), OPPO93 ($499) and the very high end McIntosh ($5,500). Even the previous Sony high end model ES did not have the capability for this. Hope this will help you out.

I have a PJD5133 3D projector and a Sony S480 3D blu ray player and it won't project 3D?




Jared


I went to BestBuy, Comp USA and no one has been able to help. Since I purchased everything separately and the projector did not come with 3D DLP link glasses, would this keep the 3D player from reconizing the projector as a 3D display. I also bought the 1.4a HDMI cable and this did not work, the output for the blu ray is 1.4 the cable is 1.4 but the projector only shows 1.3 in it s sepcifications. Any help or recommendations would be greatly appreciated. Thanks


Answer
The projector that you have is 3D ready, however its 3D feature will work only on computer or sources that use an Nvidia 3D graphics card.

Today's inexpensive DLP projectors that are touted as "3D Ready" accept only frame sequential 3D. And at this writing, their 3D capability is limited to a maximum of 1280x720 resolution. Currently, the only way to send them such a signal is to use a computer, such as one equipped with NVIDIA's 3D Vision system. Consumer electronics like Blu-ray 3D players and set-top boxes do not output frame sequential 3D. In short, all those inexpensive DLP 3D Ready projectors you've been seeing do not work with Blu-ray 3D or broadcast 3D content--it's PC or bust.




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PS3 Worth Trading For XBOX 360?




Colton W


Hi I have a PS3 40GB PS3 with only one game I REALLY play, COD4 online. Don't get me wrong though, there are tons of games I like on the PS3, just right now I am interested in COD4. I could easily trade it for a 360, but I am wondering if its worth it. All of my friends have a PS3, so if I got XBOX, I would have no one to play with like that.


Answer
PS3
-one of the best blu ray players on the market if not THE best (blu ray players with the same capabilities as the ps3âs run from 500-600 dollars)
-free online play
-rechargeable controllers
-VERY reliable and durable
-will have more games than the 360 at the end of 2009 (with bigger and better titles)
-online play is great
-amazing graphics
-great selection of games
-game discs are blue ray
-better graphics card and faster processor than 360
-only 0.2% defective rate after opened from box
-won best console of 2008
-built in free wifi
-double coated discs that protect it against scratches even from steel wool. (check the video on youtube, its impressive!).

360
-larger online community
-online costs money to use
-30% defective rate after opened from box (yes, 30!)
-breaks down and creates the ring of death (scoring of the discs until they arent readable)
-amazing graphics
-great selection of games
-has HD DVD player (which is obsolete and useless because they only make Blu Ray DVDs, not HD DVDs.)
-not cheaper than the ps3. wifi adapter is 100 bucks and 1 year of online is 50 ($150 added to any bill)

Dont waste your time with an xbox they will just break. i have owned both for a long time and the PS3 is by far the better choice. so its 100 dollars more...big deal. you get a larger hard drive and an amazing blu ray player. dont listen to bias people. you will get xbox lovers saying how the ps3 is junk. they are beyond ignorant. they are both amazing but the ps3 triumphs.

Should i trade Xbox360 for PS3?




corey


im thinking about trading my xbox 10 gig 360 for a 40 gig ps3.
the only problem is all my friends online have the 360.
but as a system, i tihnk the ps3 is better.

and suggestions?



Answer
PS3
-one of the best blu ray players on the market if not THE best (blu ray players with the same capabilities as the ps3âs run from 500-600 dollars)
-free online play
-rechargeable controllers
-VERY reliable and durable
-will have more games than the 360 at the end of 2009 (with bigger and better titles)
-online play is great
-amazing graphics
-great selection of games
-game discs are blue ray
-better graphics card and faster processor than 360
-only 0.2% defective rate after opened from box
-won best console of 2008
-built in free wifi
-double coated discs that protect it against scratches even from steel wool. (check the video on youtube, its impressive!).

360
-larger online community
-online costs money to use
-30% defective rate after opened from box (yes, 30!)
-breaks down and creates the ring of death (scoring of the discs until they arent readable)
-amazing graphics
-great selection of games
-has HD DVD player (which is obsolete and useless because they only make Blu Ray DVDs, not HD DVDs.)
-not cheaper than the ps3. wifi adapter is 100 bucks and 1 year of online is 50 ($150 added to any bill)

Dont waste your time with an xbox they will just break. i have owned both for a long time and the PS3 is by far the better choice. so its 100 dollars more...big deal. you get a larger hard drive and an amazing blu ray player. dont listen to bias people. you will get xbox lovers saying how the ps3 is junk. they are beyond ignorant. they are both amazing but the ps3 triumphs.

it is tough that your friends have the 360, but your right, the ps3 is better on almost every level. plus, the ps3 will have way more games and better exclusives (already has better exclusives) by mid to the end of 2009.




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Thursday, June 19, 2014

How do I record Blu Ray discs from output of Sanyo Xacti 1000HD or 1010HD camcorders? In 1080i 60fps res?




cdn_Father


I was looking to buy a High Def camcorder, in particular either the Sanyo Xacti 1000HD or 1010HD models. But I've been reading that the software the comes with it only burns the video to standard DVD discs in non-high-definition formats. What's the purpose of a HighDef camcorder if I can't author high-def blu ray discs with it?

What computer software out there (that doesn't cost more than the camcorder itself costs) will let me take the 1080i 60fps video from the Sanyo camcoder and burn it into a blu way disc WITHOUT downconverting it into a lower resolution/format. Doing searches with Google and the like on this topic, and it almost sounds like it's not possible, or would cost a fortune in software to do so?

Most people just seem to view the highdef video straight from the camcorder to the TV. But that's crazy cause then I'd have to continously buy new SDHC memory cards to use as storage. I want to edit my video I take on the Sanyo in 1080i/60fps on my computer, and then record it on a blu ray disc without losing that 1080i/60fps quality.

Do I need to buy extra software to do so? The software that comes with the Sanyo won't do this? If so what software do I need to buy and how much does it cost?



Answer
In answer to your first question... the reason you get DVD software only is that high-def software is a pretty new development. DVDs being established, the Sanyo folks provided a very basic way to get your video into your permanent collection. I don't know their specific software, but I'll wager it's very entry-level... if you very far into video editing and DVD authoring, you'll probably hit the limits before long.

You're absolutely right about the need for some kind of disc... flash cards really aren't intended for long-term storage. They'll probably last a good 10 years or more without developing errors, but that's a very expensive way to store your video. I'm paying about $8-10 each for 25GB BD-Rs, but that's likely to drop to $5.00 or less by the end of the year.

As far as Blu-Ray authoring, yeah, you'll need another program, and eventually a BD-R/RE drive for making full fledged Blu-Ray discs. Like DVD, Blu-Ray discs are always data discs, but can carry specific formats understood by all players, or just unstructured stuff that only a PC would understand. You could drag your video files onto a BD for archival purposes and PC playback, but that's not going to work in most stand-alone players (the PS3 can play those if they're in a supported format, but you have to browse to the media, just as on the PC).

So the thing you want to do is "author" a Blu-Ray video disc. There are actually two kinds. A simple movie without menus or any interactivity can be created using the BDAV format. The DVD style menu navigation, multiple movies, and all kinds of new-to-Blu-Ray features are only available on the BDMV format. You need a real authoring program for that.

There are several steps to the process. You need to finish editing your video first. You might then choose to render to the Blu-Ray format of choice (MPEG-2, MPEG-4/AVC, or VC-1), though many of the Blu-Ray authoring tools will also do the rendering for you. Audio is probably going to be AC-3 (Dolby Digital) or PCM (WAV).

I have used both Nero Vision and Sony's DVD Architect for BD authoring. Nero currently has compatibility problems -- authored discs played fine on the PC, but not on my PS3 (the PS3 is pretty much the gold standard for Blu-Ray compatibility these days). DVD Architect worked fine, but it's only available as part of the Vegas Pro 8 package, which runs something like $500+ new, and it's really intended for folks new to video. Also, currently, DVD Architect only basically simulates DVD authoring on Blu-Ray. That's useful -- you can make DVDs and Blu-Rays from the same project source. But full Blu-Ray authoring is far more capable (and complex), and currently pretty expensive (like over $10,000 for the state of the art stuff).

Another consideration... virtually all Blu-Ray players support the AVCHD format, which is pretty much the same idea (not exactly, but close) as a Blu-Ray authored onto a regular DVD. This is in theory to support playback of AVCHD discs from 8cm DVD-based camcorders, but you can also create your own from High Def sources, if you have the right software (currently, Nero claims to support this, while the Sony software will only create an actual BDMV formatted DVD, which is different in small ways from AVCHD and will NOT automatically play on most Blu-Ray players).

There are affordable choices. One question to decide for yourself... do you have video editing tools that work (part of the Sanyo tools or something else). If you have the means to take in your MPEG-4 files from the Sanyo, edit them to your satisfaction, and render them out to AVC or MPEG-2 or whatever, you won't need a program that does editing and Blu-Ray authoring, just the authoring part.

There's been a low-end version of Vegas, Sony's Vegas Movie Studio 9 Platinum, which runs around $90 direct from Sony. This allows high definition editing (though I'm not sure about the Sanyo formats... some of the flash-based MPEG-4 cameras use slightly odd formats that don't work in other editors unless they supply the proper Direct Show/Video for Windows CODECs... basically, if it plays in Windows Media Player, you can probably edit it in Vegas and most other tools) and creation of a Blu-Ray disc directly from the timeline. That means you get just a single movie per disc (technically, this is a BDAV disc, not a BDMV disc), no complicated authoring, no menus, no multiple videos per disc. But it's at least something, and you can download a free trial.

I mentioned Nero... Nero Vision is part of the Nero 6 suite, which runs something like $75 new (I bought it with upgrade pricing), plus another $25 or so to enable High Def features. This does quite a bit of stuff, all fairly basic other than the CD/DVD/BD burning tool, which is one of the best. However, I found enough bugs in the other tools (their player doesn't play Blu-Ray discs properly on my system, the BD authoring tool produces BDs that don't play on some players), that I'd avoid it for now if Blu-Ray creation is you main goal.

Another option is Corel's VideoStudio 11.5 Plus. I haven't used this version, though it's relatively cheap ($80) and I used an earlier version for video editing, years back, when it was owned by another company.. with fine results. Unlike Sony, VS can author AVCHD discs, which is very useful until you buy a BD-R/RE drive... for about an hour's worth of video, a dual-layer DVD has plenty of storage for full quality video from a consumer camcorder (we're not filming at the super-high bitrates possible on Blu-Ray... usually around 25Mb/s for HDV and more in the 15Mb/s range, max, for MPEG-4 camcorders... so it's a waste to go higher on your BD). The Corel app also allows BDMV authoring with menus, and there's a free demo available.

So anyway, that should be a good starting point for you.

Does the Blu-ray player on the Xbox One play Blu-ray DVD's at 1080p resolution?




KvDog1230


I have been researching the current next-gen consoles, and have decided to get a Xbox One. I know the current highest resolution a Xbox One game has run at is Titanfall, with 792p @ 60fps. But I was wondering, when playing a Blu-ray DVD (such as a movie, not a game), does the movie show in full 1080p resolution?


Answer
Yes it does and the whole resolutiongate will be over soon




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Wednesday, June 18, 2014

what does REFURBISHED mean exactly?

Q. walmart has a sony blu ray player '' refurbished '' from $119 to $79.99

does that mean used or something?

and is $79.99 a good buy?
here it is...........

http://www.walmart.com/ip/Sony-BDP-S360-1080p-Blu-ray-Disc-Player-Refurbished/14944886#ProductDetail


Answer
Refurbished means that it was

1 Returned to the factory, or an authorized repair station
2 checked for proper operations
3 repairs were done if necessary ( sometimes the unit could have been a return item with nothing wrong)
4 repackaged with all accessories that would come with a new unit.

So yes this is not a new unit, it had been taken out of the box. It may have been in someone's house, broke under warranty, fixed and being resold.

As to whether it is a good buy or not is up to you. Some people like to buy refurbished thinking that since the unit was checked out and has warranty and the price is reduced that it is. Others feel that you are just buying someone else's problem.

did i get a good buy on this BLU RAY PLAYER?

Q. i have been wanting to get a blu ray player but didn't wanna put out $100 + for one

so i saw an "insignia" refurbished unit on best buy's website and bought for less than $60 tax and shipping included

what do you think, good deal??


Answer
Stop thief... you stole it!!! Well not actually but personally I've had good luck with some of these off brand super cheap players. I still have a $29 DVD player I bought years ago. I would carry it with me on trips mostly to Asia to use in hotels. Thing got beaten pretty hard and the darn thing still works. I say if it does the job for you then why pay more? No it's not the best brand name but so what. Especially these days it pays to save money, don't pay more than you have to!

mk




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Will DVD players be too obsolete to repair?




greg_novel


With the advent of the Blu-ray disc and Blu-ray disc players, will DVD players be too obsolete to repair?


Answer
It's not a question of obsolescence, DVD players are just like most consumer electronics ... they cost so little for all but top level models that repair is uneconomical. In general, it isn't worth fixing anything significant on ANY consumer electronics component that cost less than $300 or so ... and even then it's questionable. It's a question of cost of the repair (likely more than $100 for almost anything) and the fact that new models often cost less and work better than what they replace.

Blu-Ray...?




Dave B


I want to buy the HP Pavilion dv9830us, which is only sold in the US. I have a relative who is there now, and wants to buy it to bring it back to the UK but we are not sure if the Blu-Ray player will only play NTSC.

We really want this for the Blu-Ray player to play PAL disks..

and suggestions/advice?

Thank you..
the website for this is:

http://www.circuitcity.com/ccd/Search.do?c=1&searchType=user&keyword=dv9830us&searchSection=All&go.x=0&go.y=0



Answer
Although i was not able to find a specific answer from HP's website on this exact player. I did find some language that hinted that their drives will allow you to change the region code up to a maximum of four times, once the fourth change is made that region code will be hard wired into the drive and you will be responsible for the repair cost to fix such a region code freeze if it does occur. Hope this helps




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What is a decent Blu Ray Player to buy?




The Nights


Im looking for my first blu ray player. I would like wifi, but no 3d. Something that has decent loading speed. And I'd Like to keep it fairly cheap without sacrificing quality. Any suggestions?


Answer
Believe it or not the Sony PS 3 is still the buy in blu-ray players. It takes some time to properly setup all the audio video setting in the menu (which makes a big difference in the picture quality) but its a good player. You can set it up for auto-play just insert and starts playing. The only other thing is it uses a bluetooth remote which must be purchased separately.

Kevin
40 years high end audio video specialist

which blu-ray player is the best for enabling internet on my TV?




The Travel


I want to browse the internet and stream movies on my TV and I understand some Blu-ray players will enable that. I am partial to Samsung or Panasonic but open to good suggestions. Thank you
I have an ethernet connection close to my TV's so it will be a wired connection to the Blu-ray and then an HDMI connection to the TV



Answer
Samsung BD-D6500 3D Blu-ray Disc Player (Black) is super easy to install on our wifi. hookup to netflix was also simple. It's too bad that there isn't a link to regular Hulu (just Hulu plus), but otherwise the apps seem fine. Blu ray and DVD playback is excellent and the player loads quickly. Haven't tried the 3D option.




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Will the XBox 360 console add a Blu Ray add-on in the near future?




randizzle


Will the XBox 360 console add a Blu Ray add-on in the near future, or should I just buy a PS3? I want to get a blu ray player, but also want to continue playing games. I currently have a xBox 360 console (elite).


Answer
You can consider buying PS3 slim
Ps3 Pros:
1) Quiet
2) Motion sensitive controllers
3) You can use any Bluetooth headset, keyboard, mouse, etc....
4) Blu-ray
5) Lack of flashing lights on front of machine!
6) Built in wi-fi card
7) HDMI included
8) Free Online Community and Game Play
9) Tech support speaks english and appears to be located in America, they understood my name and my question.
10) Controllers come with built in rechargable battery and can be charged with any usb port.
11) easy to navigate menus
12) No ridiculous power brick, one cord, if you want to take your ps3 with you somewhere you only need the controller, the unit and the power cord.

Ps3 Cons:
1) No IR receiver, you can't use your regular universal remote to control the ps3 you need a bluetooth which means an extra remote.
2) Shape, this one sounds stupid, but the rounded shape of the ps3 really annoys me because you can't stack, say your wii, or even lay your remotes on top of the unit. (maybe you shouldn't do that anyhow LOL)
3) Less games, or at this point I guess the better point would be less games made for the ps3, instead of built for the xbox and ported to the ps3, this is however changing and in the future will be less of an issue.

you can buy easily this online:
PlayStation 3
http://www.amazon.com/PlayStation-3-120-GB/dp/B002I0J4VQ/?tag=top-gamer-20

http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?ff3=4&pub=5574865779&toolid=10001&campid=5336686963&customid=gaming+best+deal&mpre=http%3A%2F%2Fshop.ebay.com%2Fi.html%3F_nkw%3Dps3%2Bslim%26_sacat%3D0%26_dmpt%3DVideo_Games%26_odkw%3Dkinect%26_osacat%3D0%26_trksid%3Dp3286.c0.m270.l1313

How can I convert my new Samsung Plasma TV into Smart TV with QWERTY remote?




K


I just bought my first TV. It's a 60" Samsung PN60F5300. I got a great deal on it, which allowed me to go to 60", but I don't have Smart TV capability. The salesman told me I could get a Smart box (like Roku, Vizio Co-Star, or NetGear NeoTV MAX) or a Blu-ray player with smart TV capabilities, and it would be a similar result. I don't have a DVD player, so I will need to buy one regardless. I am looking to get good quality, reliable electronics, without breaking the bank...so really, I'm just looking for good value. It is also a HUGE benefit for me to get a QWERTY remote for the Smart TV apps.

My choices:
1) Get a Smart set-top box that comes with a QWERTY remote and a plain Blu-ray player
2) Get a Smart set-top box, buy a separate QWERTY remote, and a plain Blu-ray player
3) Get a Smart DVD player and purchase a separate QWERTY remote
4) Return the TV and just buy a 50" Smart Vizio LED E-series TV that comes with a QWERTY keyboard (This would cost $35 more than the TV I have now, but I would lose 10" of screen size. I would still need to buy a plain Blu-ray player.)

My questions:
1) Which options provide the most value for a good price?
2) What brands would you recommend for these items?
3) If I buy a Blu-ray player or set-top box without a QWERTY remote, is it even possible to get one separately that will work? What product would this be?

Please help! Any advice or recommendations are welcomed! Thank you in advance!
I don't really need any gaming at all, and I'm thinking about cost, so PS3 or XBox probably won't work with my budget as well as the other options.



Answer
Yes, the Xbox seems like the winner, if it's not too expensive. If you wouldn't need the Blu-ray player, the Roku 3 has been a great success. New interface, faster hardware etc.

But it's only a streaming player. If you look into it, this review might help
http://www.topgadgetreviews.com/roku-3-streaming-player/




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Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Can I use a google tv blu ray player with timewarner cable?




Roger O


I was thinking about getting it. Not sure if it will work with dish only so i thought i'd ask. Does it give you access to the guides and videos without dish? Or is google just a partner with dish for fun


Answer
I believe you can use google tv blue ray player with time warner cable.

Possibly silly question: Blu-ray / VHS combo player?




Kristine A


Our DVD/VHS combo player died a few weeks ago. I had one in my work studio and we've been using that, figuring one of these weekends we'd go out shopping for a replacement, presumably one that would be able to play the new Blu-Ray format since sooner or later some video rental we're interested in will only be available on Blu-Ray. (Or one Blu-Ray versus multiple DVD disks, etc).

I took it for granted that the optical Blu-Ray mechanism would be backwards-compatible with standard commercial and home-burned DVD from the 4 gig thru dual-layer 7.x gig varities. That seems to be the case from what I've glimpsed.

Without thinking about it, I also assumed that for an additional extra bit of currency there'd be no problem finding players that did VHS as well as Blu-Ray/DVD. Not seeing that. Hmm.... am I just looking in the wrong places, or looking too early in the life-cycle of Blu-Ray for such devices to have cropped up on the market? (I can readily imagine that early adopters of Blu-Ray would not be the folks with continuing interest in being able to play back VHS tapes as well)



Answer
Panasonic DMP-BD70V VHS/Blu-ray Player. However, it appears to be out of production. One place I found by using the Shopping function on Google has it for $600.

If you have the inputs on your TV and/or home theater receiver, I would just get a good BluRay player on it's own, and buy a used but built tough VHS deck from, say, eBay. That would probably run you about $100 for the BluRay and maybe $200 for a solid VHS deck.




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How can I get Netflix on my Samsung Blu Ray Player ?







I have a Samsung BD-P 1590, and I updated to the latest firmware but all I have is YouTube, if anyone knows how to get Netflix please let me know.


Answer
Netflix should be built in to your player. When the unit is "Stop Mode" press the Green(B) button on your remote. This should bring up the Netflix initialization interface. If this does not work you will need to contact customer support.

Why does my Blu-Ray player's Netflix Instant look awful?




Sketch


I bought an RCA BRC 11082 Blu-Ray player recently, noticing that it had Netflix Instant. For some reason however, all Netflix movies play in very low resolution. I have a terrific internet connection and an HDMI cord hooked up. Netflix Instant movies looked great on my X-Box and usually played in HD. Was I wrong to assume a blu-ray player should play Netflix in HD? Did I get a lousy blu-ray player?

How can I resolve this?



Answer
You already have it resolved because you have your x_box which you said Netflix Instant looks great on.

I don't have an X-Box, but I know people that stream Netflix via their Bluray player, X-box, Wii (non-HD) and PS3.

Seeing Netflix instant on all these platforms, I can tell you the pic is not always great. If the resolution sucks, blame Netflix, not the player. Streaming video often has lowered resolution that the hardware is capable of in order to give the user improved playback (no lag, glitching).

Your Bluray player is only a lousy Bluray player if it doesn't play Blurays.

I mean, c'mon...Netflix is even streaming to phones now. Your Bluray player should be judged on its disc playback and not its Netflix streaming ability.




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How to play Blu-ray discs use Windows Blu-ray Player?




Megan


How can I play Blu-ray discs in Windows OS? Note that this is a matter of choosing a good brand for Windows Blu-ray Player.


Answer
Playing Blu-ray Discs (BDs) on a computer is a challenge. You must have 2 things - the hardware part and the software part. The hardware part is that you have to have a BD-ROM or burner that is HDCP compliant. In fact, the entire machine (drive, video card and display) must be HDCP compliant. High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection is an anti-copying scheme encoded in much digital content (DVDs, BDs, often in content delivered by satellite or cable) that if it encounters any non-HDCP gear in the signal path shuts the signal down (often with a message like This Content Is Not Playable or Forbidden or something).
Once you have the hardware figured out (and a laptop with a BD player is most likely already good to go - desktops, with the ability to add drives like BD burners, etc are where the problems often lie) you also need software to play a BD - Windows Media Player and even open-source programs like VLC (which plays almost all formats known to man) don't do BD.
EDIT: This site says VLC will play BD with the correct codec or codecs and the latest AACS library installed... check your level of tech ability with this! See here:
http://windows7themes.net/playing-blu-ray-on-windows-7-or-8-yes-vlc-can-play-bds.html
What I've used for years is PowerDVD - it works, most of the time. I say "most" because one thing about BDs is they change the copy protection on some discs so you must download/install an update for a particular disc to play. There are other BD software players out there, but here's the latest PowerDVD version:

http://www.cyberlink.com/products/powerdvd-ultra/features_en_US.html?&r=1

There are other, possibly less expensive packages with fewer "bells/whistles". Here's one review of the "Top 7" (this rates PDVD as #1):

http://blu-ray-player-software-review.toptenreviews.com/

Search [bd player software] to find many alternatives. Hope this helped - Good luck!

where can i download blu ray movies that can be played with windows media player?




Jayson T


i just want i sight that is very simple to use with no hassle like having to sign up to things
it also has to trustable



Answer
you can find blu ray movies by search engine, if you would like to play blu ray movies on windows media player, you need to rip blu ray to wmv or avi with this software
http://www.holeesoft.com/blu-ray-ripper.html




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Blu-Ray Player playing regular DVDs?




Don'tCallM


Okay, so I just got a Blu-Ray player and I was under the impression that it would upconvert my old DVDs to a better signal and they would take up my whole screen. Right now, I am watching Ratatouille on DVD and it's playing with black bars on the sides (and top and bottom, because it's a widescreen DVD).

What is wrong? Is there a setting somewhere I have to change? It's a Sharp, if that helps.
For the record, this is a 16:9 widescreen movie...and the black bars shouldn't be there...the picture should expand through the whole screen.



Answer
To get widescreen video to your TV, the player has to be connected to the TV using either an HDMI or a component video cable. If the player is connected with an S-video or composite video (yellow RCA plug) cable, then the player will letterbox any widescreen DVD or Blu-ray movie into a standard 4:3 square format. If the TV isn't set to stretch that 4:3 image, then you also get black areas on the sides (the effect is called "windowboxing": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windowbox_%28film%29 ).

S-video or composite video cables also don't support HD video, so you won't get all of the detail available on Blu-ray until you upgrade to a better cable.

You really should use an HDMI cable (search online for the best price) with that player, because even though a component cable will allow widescreen HD video, it will limit Blu-ray video to 1080i, and DVDs to 480p (no upconversion by the player).

can you play a 3d blu ray play in a regular blu ray player?




Jim K





Answer
The standard for Blu-ray 3D video was developed to be backwards compatible with existing 2D Blu-ray players: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blu-ray_Disc#Blu-ray_3D .

"the MVC (3D) stream is backward compatible with H.264/AVC (2D) stream, allowing older 2D devices and software to decode stereoscopic video streams, ignoring additional information for the second view"




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how to sign out of vudu on blu ray player?




Jcorey





Answer
Reset the player to default unplug the player wait 30 seconds and replug the player in and reset default again....

Are there blu-ray player that will stream video from you pc?




Ralph_T


I just got a Toshiba today and it has Vudu, Blockbuster, Netflix and Pandora. Now the logical thing to ask is why not go all the way and stream video from your PC like Tivo can.


Answer
Don't worry! Blu-ray Creator can output video to various devices, including iPod, iPhone, PSP, Zen, PS3 (HD support), XBox (HD support), Archos, phones, DVD, etc.

How to Create Blu-ray form:

http://www.blu-raydiscripper.org/blu-ray-creator.html




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Monday, June 16, 2014

Bluray resolution vs my 1024 x 576 native projector?




atapul


I have a movie projector with 1024x576 native resolution. I play DVD's with it. Regular TV seems to grainy so I don't do it. Would Blu Ray player make any difference? Is the projector's resolution high enough to make a distinction between DVD and BluRay or would I have to replace my projecor with a higher resolution TV or another projector to get some benefits from a bluray upgrade? And what is a native 1024x576 anyways? what is native about it?
And can someone please tell me what the resolution is for a standard US DVD vs BluRay? I want to see where my projector stands in between...



Answer
As it stands... DVD's only output at 720x576 at a maximum in terms of pixel resolution. US which primarily uses NTSC DVDs output frames of 720x480 at 60hz which achieves about 29fps. EU PAL DVDs achieve the higher resolution of 720x576 but subsequently only at 50hz or about 23fps due to data constraints on SCART/Composite/Component. A Blu-Ray disk will offer a resolution of 1920x1080 at 100hz which is just shy of 60fps. Plus, blu-ray supports progressive scan where each image is built up from first to last pixel as opposed to interlacing used in DVD whereby the even lines are built up in one cycle followed by the odd lines (or vice versa i dont remember which)

1st, a Blu-Ray player, on paper, would make a difference, though it would only be a negligable difference. Its called a native 1024x576 since that is the resolution it is designed for. It will be able to handle lower resolutions for the visually impaired but a resolution of 640x480 would not be 'native'. Since a US DVD only outputs at 720x480 then you would be able to get more out the projector from a blu-ray source. But it would be wasted in that a blu ray will do 1920x1080.

If you choose to upgrade to blue ray you need to invest in the source (blu ray player, PS3, etc), the output (HDTV, HD projector - not sure if or where you can get them), and the connectivity (HDMI cable). If you get a good source and output, dont be tempted by a cheaper cable. Insufficient connectivity will destroy the benefits of blu ray. Invest in a cable that can carry the 4.95 Gbps that blu ray requires, such as a 750 series monster cable :)

how do u play video games in 3d?




Andre


i understand u need a 3d tv but do u need 3d glasses or anything? and how does it work?


Answer
Buy a sony bravia 3D tv buy a HDMI 1.4 cable buy a PS3 buy killzone 3 set everything up put on the 3D glasses on the tv usually comes with 2 3D glasses if you want buy a 7.1 audio system and an optical cable sit on your couch and enjoy a really awesome game in 3D at 1080P @60FPS if you are wondering why I chose PS3 as the 3D game machine is cause 3DS 3D effect isn't as good as a 3D with glasses and 3D computers are expensive as hell and killzone 3 is a 3D game exclusive to PS3 and a 3D compatable blu ray player is like 400-500$ and the PS3 delivers the same 3D as that expensive blu ray player but it is only 300$




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Desktop PC- worth selling? (UK prices)?




Dan


OS - MS Windows XP Professional 32-bit SP3
CPU - Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 @ 2.40GHz
RAM - 4.00 GB Dual-Channel DDR2 @ 400MHz (6-6-6-18)
MOTHERBOARD - Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd. P35-DS3 (Socket 775)
GRAPHICS - 512MB GeForce 8800 GT (Undefined)
HDs - 488GB SAMSUNG, 1465GB SAMSUNG (both SATA)
OPTICAL - Optiarc DVD RW AD-7200S, ATAPI iHOS104 (Blu Ray)
CASE - Antec P182
FANS - Cant remember the brand but ive replaced two with silent, high rpm fans.
CPU COOLER - Again cant remember but it was highly rated at the time and cost me around £70.
POWER - Average priced modular 750W (was said to be reliable at the time)

Old school gaming pc ive been using for a while. Obviously looking to upgrade but what would you do with this?

I definitely building my own replacement so ive got the following options:

1) Use the case, power supply and fans in the new-build. Sell the rest.
2) Use the case, power supply and fans in the new-build. Use the rest to build another system or some kind of media player.
3) Sell the system as a whole.
4) Sell the system with a spare 22" monitor I have and accessories.


As far as im aware
1) = getting not much towards my new build.
2) = paying for extra lower end parts to build something I might not be able to sell or use.
3) = The Antec case is a work of art that cost me (and is still for sale at) £120 so im loathed to sell it.
4) = Same as 3) but will the monitor make it more saleable? Wanted £60 for the monitor on its own.


What would you do? Im swaying towards 1).
John - originally build this for £900 4-5 years ago and I think thats the reason why its lasted so long with very few issues. As a result i'll be looking to spend around the same on the new machine, whack a hugely expensive card in it and hopefully it'll last 5 years from now.

Another reason why upgrading isnt an option- ive tried twice without any luck to put Windows 7 onto it. It gets to desktop and cuts out and I spent a good 2 weeks googling fixes but to no avail so I went back to 32bit XP (depressing).



Answer
It's worth over £200 parts on eBay , I'd keep it and upgrade the GPU? (that quad core is just as good if not better than a i3!) (I still run pentium d & 7600gt) I'd say £400 all in a case working with windows 7 £300 with xp

High definition on LCD television?




Archie and


I'm buying a Full HD Digital LCD TV....
I was told that to get the HD, you have to get a lead...

Is this the lead??
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/GOLD-PLATED-HDMI-HDMI-CABLE-LEAD-PS3-HDTV-HD-DVD-/390208821701?cmd=ViewItem&pt=UK_Computing_CablesConnectors_RL&hash=item5ada4219c5#ht_2044wt_1137

And if so...Where do you plug it in?
And is it absolutely necessary to use it??
Or would my tv automatically be HD??



Answer
You will need an HDMI cable to get a high definition image from your DVD player, Blu-Ray Player, etc.




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Sunday, June 15, 2014

I need a new 3D Blu-ray player.?




Keith


I own a Samsung home theater system. It is a Blu-ray player that has a built in amplifier so you just hook up the speakers directly to the unit. I need to upgrade to a 3D capable player but I don't want to have to pay for new speakers. Where can I find a 3D capable Blu-ray player that has a built in amplifier with analog speaker outputs?
I know that this can be done. You can swap players especially if they are the same brand. I just need to find somewhere I can buy the main unit.



Answer
Avdaddy is right, such home theater in a box systems do NOT work when separated from parts of them.

Junk your POS system, spend $500 to buy something GOOD, and then you'll be fine.

But, cheap just gets you... CHEAP.

A decent baseline HT receiver would cost $200, like a Pioneer 521K at Amaz*n, add in $215 for a Polk 6750 5.1 speaker system, about $40 for the needed cables and speaker wires (16 gauge speaker wire, a subwoofer cable, and two HDMI cables.), then plug in your 3D Bluray player and let the good times roll.

I will second it, why do so many people buy crappy POS HTIB systems ? Why not just flush 300 $1 bills down the toilet ?

Blu-ray player??




steve t


Im planning on buying a Blu-ray player since the HD-DVD empire collapsed along with my HD-DVD xbox 360 add on ( tough lesson to learn) but which is a good blu-ray out there to buy under 500?? I heard stories about long loading times, and i have seen plenty on youtube vid's, my HD-DVD player did not have that problem, and then i heard about firmware updates. I dont wanna spend half a grand on a blu-day player and find out its out dated on the firmware. Any suggestions on a safe purchase.
forgot to mention, i wouldnt mind a PS3 but all the games i like so far are on 380 and future games coming up exclusive for 360 like Gears of War 2 and Resident Evil 5, Ninja Gaiden 2 etc.. although ps3 sounds logical, i wont have time to toggle between ps3 games and xbox 360 games.
correction i mean 360, lol.. not 380.
Its kinda odd to me, buying a gaming console system just for the Blu-ray, although being able to download firmware on it does sound good.... are there blu-ray players out there that can enable you to update the player, or should i just wait till' blu-ray players catch up with firmware updates.



Answer
The only other 2.0 player on the market right now is the Panasonic DMP-BD50, which can bitstream and decode all audio formats, has HDMI 1.3 and analog 5.1 outputs and an ethernet connection for BD-Live content and firmware upgrades.

However, because it's the only 2.0 standalone player on the market it's still at a premium. If you wait until Black Friday or the last few weeks leading up to Christmas you'll get a standalone player for $199-$249 and it very well may be a profile 2.0 player like the Sony BDP-S350, which is being released soon and will get 2.0 compatability via firmware upgrade.

The PlayStation 3 is an excellent option, even if you don't use it for games. You can install Linux on it, browse the web with a bluetooth keyboard and mouse, download movies on it which don't have DRM, has HDMi 1.3, fastest load times, great picture and sound quality.

Good luck - the more Blu-ray's you watch the harder it gets to watch DVD, even with a great upscaler which the PS3 definitely is, scoring 120/130 on the HQV DVD test bench disc.




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I need a blu ray player with pre amp outputs to connect to external amps?




they call


I am setting up a small theater. I need a blue ray player that has pre-amp outputs that I can connect to external amplifiers. Preferably one for each channel.


Answer
Wow - so many wrong answers.

I have a second-gen Panasonic with 6 RCA outputs for the sound. This allowed me to get the un-compressed HD audio feed without having to re-purchase a AV Receiver with the updated firmware to handle this.

The 6-channel analog outputs on a BluRay player is not too common these days except for the higher-end models.You are not going to find these on the $125 models. Be prepared to spend $250+ for this feature. The quality of the DAC (Digital to Analog Converter) on these models have to be superior to process the sound so this drives the prices up.

The Oppo-BDP83 will work but it's a few hundred dollars. You might look at the Pioneer Elite PDB players. Pioneer makes some higher-end models and these often have pre-outs for all the channels.

After some searching I found the Pioneer BDP-51FD on Amazon that has the pre-outs you want. The new prices are steep but some people are selling used.

Hooking up Blu-Ray player to HD tv?




Audrey Rod


I bought a Blu-Ray thinking i would be able to hook it up to my HDTV that is a little old but still HD. However there is not an HDMI in slot on my TV. There is one on my cable box though. Help is greatly appreciated, thanks in advance! :)


Answer
Most Blu-ray players will not output hd over component cables for copy-protection reasons (as Masticina said).
But if your tv has DVI (looks like this: http://imageshack.us/a/img16/8039/dvi.jpg ), you can use an hdmi-to-dvi adapter or an hdmi-to-dvi cable. They are not expensive (just a few dollars) and you can find them on ebay, amazon, monoprice.com, dx.com, etc.

If you're not connecting your Blu-ray player to a sound receiver, you will need a second cable to the tv for audio (DVI is video only). The type depends on what your tv has for the DVI's audio input. Your player will need analog audio output (red & white rca jacks) for this (newer players don't have these anymore).

One more problem: if you tv is old enough, it might not support hdcp (high-bandwidth digital content protection) which is another copy-protection thing. If that's the case, the player likely won't work (in hd) with your tv.




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Samsung 3600 Blu-Ray Player?




W


I just purchased the samsung P-3600. It was a refurbished model from Buy.com. I have it connected wirelessly to the internet. The problem is that the only program in "e-content" is "YouTube" How do I get "netflix" "Pandora" and "Blockbuster" applications on the device?
I found out from Samsung this was a Blu-Ray player not created for USA. There is no way to get netflix on my device. Everthing else works great on it...



Answer
Good Question, mine came new with all the apps you mentioned.

Pandora is free for 40 hours a month but you have to subscribe to it.

Netflix needs a subscription also. You can probably ask both how to get it on the blu ray. When I turned the blu ray on the first time, a registration number came up and I had to go online to type that number in. Being refurbished, someone else probably used those reg. numbers.

Blockbuster is a rip off. $4.99 to $6.99 Per Movie. I don't think you really will miss this one.

Good luck

Can a blu-ray player be used on an analog tv?




StealthBun


Yeah, I still have my 15yr old non-digital, non-hd tv, nor do I subscribe to any of the cable's neat stuff with a converter box. I'm broke. I cope.

However my dvd player finally died and I'm debating if I should replace it with a blu-ray player... if it will even work on my tv (it's a Philips Magnavox, if that helps at all... no, it's not even a flat screen...*hangs head in shame*) Or if I should just get another dvd player. Please don't tell me to upgrade my tv. I don't have the funds and it's not going to happen.

I noticed some of the Toshiba blu-rays refurbished are also 3d-ready and whereas I KNOW I need an hd/3d compatible tv to make it 3d... is it worth grabbing a 3d-ready blu-ray (if it will work on my ancient tv that is) in the hopes that I might be in a better financial situation someday when I CAN upgrade the tv?

I just know enough electronicky stuff to get myself into trouble, so please, be kind with the jargon and talk me through things.

Thanks so much!



Answer
Get the most advanced blu ray machine that you can, do not hold back on features or technology for the fear of compatibility issues. Ok. ready? you're gonna love this. I know where you can get a large flat screen tv for free. Go to Craigslist and shop the "free" stuff category locally. Now, you'll have to use your senses to decipher what each of those posts are REALLY saying. It is very true (especially here) that if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. However, a large flat screen CRT television (even hd) is currently changing from asset to liability in the living room of the world. Some places more than others. The affordability of the HD flat panel displays has people begging for someone to come and take that 300 lbs. CRT away, please. I only look at posts that have phone numbers, because until you talk to someone, every post is a fairy tale trying to soak up personal information for fraudulent purposes. Go get a big free new tv today and you'll actually be helping the people/person trying to get rid of it. Good luck




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