BBC - The people who hunt old TVs (www.bbc.com)
from emb@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 12 Sep 22:37
https://lemmy.world/post/35832260

#technology

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reddig33@lemmy.world on 12 Sep 22:55 next collapse

They can have them. Heavy, bulky, blurry, high voltage, pain in the ass to repair nonsense. I do not miss CRTs at all.

victorz@lemmy.world on 12 Sep 23:41 next collapse

Plasmas also looked pretty ass compared to OLEDs today.

AstralPath@lemmy.ca on 13 Sep 01:34 collapse

Can’t beat them for games that require low latency input though. Just playing retro games on them is worth owning one.

floo@retrolemmy.com on 13 Sep 00:08 next collapse

No thanks. I absolutely do not miss CRT’s. One of my favorite innovations over the last 20 to 30 years is civilizations shifting to flat panel displays instead.

tal@lemmy.today on 13 Sep 03:44 collapse

In most respects, CRTs were technically worse, but a lot of video game art was designed around their characteristics, optimized for them, and thus can appear better on a CRT. We can — and do — try to emulate CRT quirks on LCDs/LEDs to varying degrees, but we’re always going to be just approaching what a CRT looked like.

wackoid.com/…/10-pictures-that-show-why-crt-tvs-a…

Final Fantasy 6:

<img alt="" src="https://i0.wp.com/wackoid.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Final-Fantasy-6.jpg">

Castlevania: Symphony of the Night:

<img alt="" src="https://i0.wp.com/wackoid.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Castlevania-Symphony-of-the-Night1.jpg">

Final Fantasy 7:

<img alt="" src="https://i0.wp.com/wackoid.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Final-Fantasy-7.jpg">

Things like blurriness are a limitation in the fidelity of the display, true enough, but in the context of material optimized for that display, it can be a positive rather than a negative.

squaresinger@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 07:55 next collapse

On the other hand, if you have a much better resolution on an LCD, you have ample space to emulate the CRT looks.

HonoraryMancunian@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 08:16 collapse

Case in point: literally what we’ve just been looking ar

[deleted] on 13 Sep 10:07 collapse

.

fubarx@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 01:12 next collapse

Most TV programs are broadcast in HD format. Especially sports. That was the main reason we got rid of our last CRT. The scoreboards were getting cut off at the edges. That, and the fact that the bottom right corner of the display had permanently faded to black.

SkabySkalywag@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 07:09 next collapse

Slightly off topic from crt nostalgia:

I do miss the older ‘dumb’ flat screens. Feels like all devices, but specially tvs, are spying on us by default. It’s an exhausting privacy arms race with my home network against ads or tracking.

Luccus@feddit.org on 13 Sep 07:47 collapse

I once got myself a small projector. It ran on Android. I didn’t want to connect it to my network. Unfortunately, an unsecured Wi-Fi hotspot would sometimes pop up nearby, which the damn thing would connect to in order to download ads and bother me with nonsense.

The workaround was to give it Wi-Fi, but block the internet connection in the router. The solution was to throw it away. Malicious little fuck.

qweertz@programming.dev on 15 Sep 10:24 collapse

Samsung TVs also notoriously do this. Even if you don’t connect them to anything yourself, they will look for insecure Wifi accesspoints to upload their spying data to

melfie@lemy.lol on 16 Sep 00:14 collapse

Yikes, I have a Samsung smart TV. Guess I’ll be wrapping it in tin foil after reading this.

qweertz@programming.dev on 16 Sep 13:46 collapse

Smart TVs are some scary shit, like seriously. All the stuff they record and set home is extremely concerning

MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip on 13 Sep 10:01 collapse

And the fans of '80s and '90s video games who adore CRTs say it’s the way those games were meant to be played. With fuzzy pixels, and graphics that have darkness and depth.

<img alt="Connoisseur" src="https://lemmy.zip/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimgs.xkcd.com%2Fcomics%2Fconnoisseur.png">

If shaders aren’t enough anymore.