Quote:
Originally Posted by sabredog
Except their colour saturation is so high and can not be well adjusted easily.
It came down to either the Sony or Samsung for us. The Sony got the gong.
Incidentally, they were the same price on the shelf.
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Some Samsung models have a much better colour. I have a
B650, didn't have any problems getting it calibrated and then having enough additional tweak-ability to slightly adjust it to my preferred settings.
I preferred the display to all other model TVs that were out at the time. However, this was 3-4 years ago, so whether current Samsung models are still as good I couldn't say. I've no intention of changing mine though, the picture quality is great on blurays
As an aside our previous 2-3 TVs going all the way back to hulking CRTs have been Sony. This is the first time I've bought a non Sony TV.
One product Sony make that's really good (imho) is "Sony Vegas". It's priced reasonably £30-£80 depending on the one you get (ignore pro which has features that are not needed by most people for home movies) and for most home users has more than enough features whilst keeping price lower than Premiere/Finalcut.