Target has
65" Element 4K UHD HDR Frameless Roku TV on sale for
$299.99. Select free store pickup where available.
Thanks to community member
dondixon87 for finding this deal
Note, curbside pickup may vary depending on location
About the Product - Striking 4K Ultra HD resolution
- 60Hz Native Refresh Rate
- VESA Mount: 300x200mm
- LED Direct Lit
- Built-in Roku platform with easy-to-use Roku remote
- HDR10 for enhanced brightness, contrast, and color
- Works with Google Assistant, Apple AirPlay, Apple HomeKit, and Amazon Alexa
- Free Roku mobile app
Warranty - Includes a standard 1-year warranty w/ purchase
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https://elementelectron
783 Comments
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Don't look for happiness in a new TV. All you need to do is come back on these forums and realize if you didn't buy an OLED you can't possibly be happy.
Still use my 50" Panasonic plamsa bought in 2010. The picture is great
Don't look for happiness in a new TV. All you need to do is come back on these forums and realize if you didn't buy an OLED you can't possibly be happy.
Yes, I think I will probably hold out for an OLED and buy a regular old OLED when the next best thing replaces OLED (in 2029?) That would allow me to amortize that old Samsung down to about $0.10 per day. TVs were sure expensive in 2009 but of a quality that seems to last (especially if you don't have 20/10 vision anymore).
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Personally, I'm still using a 1080p display. I see no point in upgrading until OLED becomes less costly. HDR is the only thing I care about as I don't think there is a big difference between 4K and 1080p at the distance I watch TV. However, that means I'd have to get new content like 4K/UHD discs just to take advantage of HDR.
I borrow blu-ray movies from my local library for free, but they don't have 4K discs and I doubt they will any time soon. That means I'd have to borrow movies from elsewhere which isn't cheap or easy to do nowadays. Other option is streaming movies online in 4K/HDR, but is that better picture quality than 1080P blu-ray discs?
The costs would add up too much in so many ways for minor improvements, I'm better off just waiting. I don't think the upgrades in TV tech in the last ten years are as dramatic as the transition from SD to HD. When I saw HD content on demo TVs at Best Buy for the first time, that was mind blowing. All the new stuff like "4K, UDH, HDR" aren't the same level of improvement from non HD to HD. OLED TVs are amazing though and that's what I'm waiting for next.
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