With much-improved user interfaces and a growing arsenal of useful apps and services, today’s smart TVs are finally living up to their name. In addition to rating each TV, we also graded its software platform. — Bryan Gardiner
The Basics
Why haven’t smart TVs caught on yet?
Every manufacturer offers a different mix of proprietary services, user interfaces, and apps, presumably in the hope of setting itself apart from the pack. But as a result, many customers have been waiting on the sidelines until the chaos subsides. In fact, about 20 percent of smart-TV owners don’t connect them to the Internet.
There are apps available for these TVs?
Yep. There are now TV versions of a lot of the same apps you use on your smartphone or tablet, available through the manufacturers’ own online stores. Not all of them are ready for prime time, though. While Flickr and Skype shine on the big screen, Facebook and other major social apps are much less compelling.
Should I wait a bit longer to buy?
Nope. Manufacturers have improved the user experience, with streamlined interfaces and apps that use your smartphone as a remote. And there’s already some convergence in features: Services like Netflix and Amazon Instant Video have become common centerpieces. Add wireless networking, and it’s easier than ever to ditch those cable subscriptions.
Buying Advice
Nowadays, Ethernet ports and built-in Wi-Fi command little or no price premium (unlike 3-D gear), so there’s no reason your next set shouldn’t be a connected one. If you’re just looking to supplement a steady diet of cable or satellite content, the choice is simple: Buy the best HDTV you can afford. Almost all of them now come with great backup video services like Netflix, Blockbuster, and Amazon Instant Video. If you’re in a cable-cutting state of mind, make sure your broadband speed is up to snuff, then think about the services and apps you use most — the offerings vary widely between platforms. And don’t equate more apps with a better experience: On a 50-inch plasma, using Twitter or Google Talk is about as pleasant as staring at test patterns.
How We Tested
We optimized picture and audio settings using THX’s latest calibration disc, made the necessary firmware updates, and ran each set’s video processors through a gauntlet of HQV benchmark tests. Then we spent hours wading through platform interfaces, downloading apps, and sampling every web-connected feature we could find.
If you crave variety, this 3-D set will keep you busy for days. Sony’s platform fills all 55 inches of the edge-lit screen with a wide array of apps and stand-alone services — everything from podcasts to Pandora to Sony’s own on-demand service. There’s even a “channel” that streams free 3-D movie clips. Most important, this LCD aced every processing test we threw at it, smoothing out jaggies and deinterlacing film-based 24-fps HD sources like a pro.
WIRED Built-in Wi-Fi. Fine-tuning options make it a picture tweaker’s delight. Netflix button on remote.
TIRED At least 15 minutes of registering and activating. Some clouding and screen-uniformity issues in dark scenes.
$2,900, Sony
TV
Platform
Authors: