2011年11月27日 星期日

TV bargains abound this holiday season

With TV makers expected to add more Net and Web-based connectivity to next year's models, "This holiday season might be the last year you are buying a TV as you know it," says Eric Bleeker, senior technologist at The Motley Fool. In 2012, he says, "Everything on the TV is about to change."

Consumers have put off buying new TVs in anticipation of good deals during the holiday shopping season, says Paul Gagnon, director of North American TV research at DisplaySearch. "In terms of raw demand, we think it could be up for the holiday season."

TV makers have been touting 3-D and "smart" features that deliver Internet-based services such as Netflix, but he and other analysts foresee most Black Friday and holiBrowse through our impressive range of bestledlights and buy online now.day shoppers focused on the price and size of a TV as the most important aspects of their buying decision.

Retailers are responding to those shopping tendencies. "Price is always the big feature," says Stephen Baker of The NPD Group. "We are going to see a lot of aggressiveness and see a lot more (models) in the very large sizes. People are looking for a really big television as they start to upgrade their flat panels."

Last year, retailers rewarded holiday shoppers with 32-inch displays priced below $200. This year, Best Buy has already broken that barrier with a 42-inch Sharp 1080P LCD display priced at $199.99 starting at 12 a.m. Friday.

(The 1080p stands for 1080 progressive resolution, pretty much the standard for most displays 40 inches and higher. There are some HDTVs that use 720 progressive, which has fewer pixels making up the image and therefore a slightly less crisp picture.)

Those prices, Gagnon says, "are remarkable to somebody who has been following the industry for a decade."

Low prices can sometimes work in favor of both consumer and retailer. Shopper Brad Pauley, 35, from Westchester, Calif., found himself at the Video and Audio Center near Los Angeles. "What drew me was an ad in the paper," he says. "There was a pretty good-sized TV, 55 inches, for $797."

After looking at the set, he gravitated to a 47-inch LCD set from LG that had a better picture and cost $500 more. "The salesperson explained that the TV had built-in 3D,"See our bestleddownlight Lighting displays for a sample of strip lighting applications. says Pauley,The Best Led divinglight. Riding your bicycle at night without lights puts you in danger because motorists cannot see you, who likes to watch action sports.

The display's TruMotion technology reduces video blurring by refreshing the image more rapidly.

"If you have time to shop around," Pauley says,Minjun Electronic Co.,Ltd have the best led bike light,and provide goodleddownlight with you, "there are plenty of deals. These places are all willing to match each other."

Shoppers looking to replace their current TVs with even larger displays should be able to find big-screen plasma and LCD displays, 50-inch and larger, for less than $1,000, says Al Griffin, technical editor for Sound & Vision magazine.

Already this week, Best Buy included a 55-inch LG 1080p LCD display with LED-backlighting for $897.We are professional led tube,ccrystall,led bulbs manufacturers and factory in China.99 among its pre-Thanksgiving daily deals. Use of LED lights behind the panel rather than fluorescent bulbs is a common upgrade that can improve energy efficiency and picture quality, Griffin says.

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