@sammyrhodes (3/3) or the “Sharpness” setting (turn that off). This literally draws a false line around shapes. For example, if there is a light colored shirt on screen against a medium colored background, the TV’s sharpness setting would add a black outline to the shirt (reducing accuracy).
@sammyrhodes (2/3) …some TVs would have show no difference on test patterns for values between 0 and around 30. This was one of my biggest peeves with new TVs. That and overly saturated colors that make areas that would normally have a gradient show up as a solid area of color, (contd)
@Danielblair125@pulpmx@kellenbrauer I thought I remembered it differently too, but is this what you were talking about DB? I remember that era liking how Doug Henry would mix the colors up. Like the purple chest pro with the teal pants/jersey combo.
@dustyslay I hope not, I put a remote start in a smoker’s car Thursday. The lobby at my shop stunk the rest of the day, as did my clothes.
I’d take the scent of cinnamon fruity pebbles vape over the absolute stank of ash tray and smoke residue every rime.
@StudioCat5@ReturnOfDeeO I have a janky TCL with built in Roku at my shop and don’t hear it. I have a pretty good Samsung with a Sony receiver, Klipsch surround speakers, and Apple TV for streaming at home and don’t hear anything.