| | | | - 720p HD Resolution
- Wide Color Enhancer
- 3 HDMI Inputs
- 6ms response time
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| | | | Product Description: Enjoy a theater-like experience in your own home with the 32" LN32A450. A remarkable 10,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio delivers an extraordinary picture comprised of vivid colors and outstanding quality. Want to feel the action, not just see it? A 6ms response time promises smooth sailing and virtually no blurring when you're watching movies and sports events while SRS TruSurround XT delivers a virtual surround sound experience. |  | | | |
Average Rating : 
Rating : - After a year and two months, menu lettering is scrambled and unreadable I bought my TV about a year and two months ago, just before Christmas 2008. Since then it's been a good TV - picture quality is good, sound quality is good (it's my first HDTV, so I don't have anything to compare it to; everything about it seemed amazing compared to the 19" tube TV I'd been using). However, yesterday when I turned it on I found that all of the on-screen menu displays (channel number and description, volume number, all TV setting options under the menu option, etc.) had turned into scrambled gibberish. What this means is that you can't read the number of the channel you're on, can't read the information about the channel, can't read the menu to change settings on the TV, etc. While the TV continues to work, it's a frustrating experience to not be able to use every function, especially since I've only had it for a year and two months. Sure, it's possible to open up the manual and guide my way through the menus that way, and I don't have cable so it's not hard to find the channels I need, but it'd be better if the TV just worked the way it's supposed to. I called Samsung about it and they confirmed that it's out of warranty so I'll have to pay for repair, and so now it's a matter of deciding whether or not I want to drop money on fixing this thing. Most likely I'll just save my money, keep using it in its current condition, and buy another brand when this one dies completely (which may not be too far in the future if what I'm reading about these TV's power systems is true). *Insert concluding rant about planned obsolescence here* Read more ... |  |