I keep tvs for 10 years.

Sent from my iPad 2

On Dec 2, 2011, at 6:35 PM, Joshua MacCraw <[email protected]> wrote:

> What I meant was that with new tv's coming with these features standard for
> the past couple of years, sometime soon market for these add-on devices are
> going to be outmoded and I think that time is coming soon if not already
> upon us .
> On Dec 2, 2011 1:45 PM, "Francisco Tapia" <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> well... it costs between $50 to $120 for these devices VS spending on a
>> $300 xbox/ps3 or +$500 on a new TV, and buying a new TV is sometimes a
>> difficult proposition.. example:
>> 
>> My Samsung in one room was purchased when USB video support was the thing,
>> and ethernet was new on TVs, so it supported minimal apps.  Samsung is one
>> of the hardware vendors out there that just kinda suck in software support
>> :(, I say that because the TV that I have has all the same hardware like
>> the newer TV that came out a few months after that supported dlna streaming
>> ethernet.. arg!  Past the time where I can go back and return it.. and am I
>> really going to hold on to the TV box for any length of time?  No, i'm
>> not...
>> 
>> My recent purchased TV supports dlna plus a plethora of Apps... no
>> roku/atv2 required.  it even has wifi :) (i purposefully skipped out on 3D,
>> dont like it, dont want it)
>> 
>> 
>> -Francisco
>> http://bit.ly/sqlthis   | Tsql and More...
>> <http://db.tt/JeXURAx>
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On Fri, Dec 2, 2011 at 11:27, Joshua MacCraw <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>>> With dnla,netflix, hulu, and etc... I becoming mainstream features on tv
>>> sets, nevermind xbox or playstation doing them, once you have dnla &
>>> CIFS/NFS servers setup I don't see the point in many of these other
>>> devices.
>>> 
>> 

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