Crosswords1 min ago
hd ready lcd tv and sky
1 Answers
Oh help, i'm confused.
I've been looking at a nice Samsung LCD TV that has (amongst other bells and whistles) an Integrated Digital Tuner & Internet@TV and its own EPG.
What I want to know is.... as a subscriber to Sky, are the features mentioned contained on the TV unavailable to me? Or should I be able to switch between Sky (and Sky's EPG) to the TV's own features very easily, depending on what I want to do at the time.
So for example, will I be able to set Sky to record something, then flick over to TV functions and go onto Internet@TV and pick up a film from LoveFilm perhaps, or log on to Facebook 'cos hubby is hogging the computer to edit his music?
I've been looking at a nice Samsung LCD TV that has (amongst other bells and whistles) an Integrated Digital Tuner & Internet@TV and its own EPG.
What I want to know is.... as a subscriber to Sky, are the features mentioned contained on the TV unavailable to me? Or should I be able to switch between Sky (and Sky's EPG) to the TV's own features very easily, depending on what I want to do at the time.
So for example, will I be able to set Sky to record something, then flick over to TV functions and go onto Internet@TV and pick up a film from LoveFilm perhaps, or log on to Facebook 'cos hubby is hogging the computer to edit his music?
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by mandimoo. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Your TV will be able to work in three different ways.
1. It can act as little more than a viewing screen (with an amplifier and speakers) when it accepts a signal from an external source (such as your Sky box). i.e. it will be the Sky box which will be 'doing all of the work'.
2. It can receive a signal through an aerial, which is then handled by the TV's built-in digital tuner before being passed to the 'screen + speakers' final bit of the circuitry.
3. It can receive internet data from your router, which is handled by the TV's 'built in computer' before being passed to that final (screen + speakers) bit of circuitry.
Those three systems are distinct from one another, so can switch from using your Sky box (but, if you want, leaving it to record something at the same time) to either terrestrial TV (assuming that you've got a normal aerial, of course!) or to internet use. The Sky box won't interfere with the other uses (or vice versa).
However, if I've read the information here correctly
http://www.samsung.com/uk/internet-tv/
the TV's onboard computer (for handling internet data) doesn't have a web browser, per se. It just has certain apps built in (such as those for accessing the BBC iPlayer or Youtube videos), with further apps being available to download. So (as I understand it) you can't go to ANY web page (such as Facebook). You can only access the websites which the TV has dedicated apps for.
Chris
1. It can act as little more than a viewing screen (with an amplifier and speakers) when it accepts a signal from an external source (such as your Sky box). i.e. it will be the Sky box which will be 'doing all of the work'.
2. It can receive a signal through an aerial, which is then handled by the TV's built-in digital tuner before being passed to the 'screen + speakers' final bit of the circuitry.
3. It can receive internet data from your router, which is handled by the TV's 'built in computer' before being passed to that final (screen + speakers) bit of circuitry.
Those three systems are distinct from one another, so can switch from using your Sky box (but, if you want, leaving it to record something at the same time) to either terrestrial TV (assuming that you've got a normal aerial, of course!) or to internet use. The Sky box won't interfere with the other uses (or vice versa).
However, if I've read the information here correctly
http://www.samsung.com/uk/internet-tv/
the TV's onboard computer (for handling internet data) doesn't have a web browser, per se. It just has certain apps built in (such as those for accessing the BBC iPlayer or Youtube videos), with further apps being available to download. So (as I understand it) you can't go to ANY web page (such as Facebook). You can only access the websites which the TV has dedicated apps for.
Chris