TV Land, part 1

If you don’t like boring technical details, you may as well stop reading now. Go here instead.
I just bought a Samsung TXM3097WHF TV. It’s a 30″ widescreen, one step up from the low-end 3096WHF that Best Buy sells. This particular model adds 3:2 pulldown and a two-tuner picture-in-picture circuit to the base model, and I lucked into one for $792 at Sears– about $300 off the best normal price. Of course, I got a floor model, and it’s been discontinued by Samsung, but it met my objective of providing an inexpensive widescreen HD set. (The nearest model I could find that didn’t say “Samsung” on the front is an $1800 Toshiba 34″ widescreen, so I’m prepared to put up with a lot for the $1000 savings.)
Problem #1 is that the TV is too wide to fit in the entertainment center– the flare at the back of the case is about 1 1/4″ too wide for the precut opening. A little saw work will fix that right up, as soon as I get some saw blades.
Problem #2: the TV has two component inputs, which is great. It also has two RCA-style inputs. However, you can’t use all four at the same time. Oops. Somehow Samsung forgot to mention this in their marketing literature.
Problem #3: there’s one S-Video input, and it’s on the side panel. I knew about this one ahead of time, but it’s still aggravating, since the TiVo and VCR are both fed to the TV via the receiver’s S-Video out.
Problem #4: the TV uses two separate buttons to cycle between the inputs. Button 1 goes RF->component1->component2; button 2 goes RF->RCA1->RCA2->S-Video. That makes switching (say) from DVD to TiVo a finger-stretching exercise not unlike a concert pianist’s warmup.
However, for $1000 in my pocket, I’m prepared to put up with a lot. (After all, I’m getting off much easier than this guy did.)
The HDTV feed installation went well, since I did all of it. The installer had 15 minutes of training on the DCT-5100 cable box this morning, before his first install. He’d never seen a component video cable or optical SPDIF, and he was leery of disturbing any of my wiring. I ended up doing the work while he struggled with Buckeye’s call center to get my box authorized. After a three-hour wait, I can now receive two of the four HD channels: Showtime-HD (currently showing a 4:3 movie) and WTOL-DT (currently showing Oprah, which is bad enough in standard definition.) No Discovery Channel or HBO yet, which is too bad; it looks like there’s some good stuff on later tonight. More when I have time to dig into the stack of paper the installer left, much less actually watch something in HD. It’s hard to imagine that I’ll want to watch anything on CBS, but hey, maybe I will.

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