How technology changed TV

4 Ways Technology Changed the TV Landscape

TV has undergone many changes since the first black and white sets were sent to market. Here are 4 of the biggest technological changes to TV over the decades:

  • Mass production – The first television signals were being broadcast in the 1930s, but the TV didn’t become a common item in American homes until 1948, when mass production began. In 1939, there were less than 1,000 TVs in use. By 1953, there were 25,233,000.
  • Cable – The widespread adoption of cable TV in the 70s, 80s, and 90s dramatically expanded the number of channels available to people in their homes and led to the creation of boutique, pay-for-access channels like HBO. The growth of cable also coincided with the start of MTV, which brought a pop culture revolution straight into American living rooms.
  • TiVo – In the age of streaming and smart TVs, it’s hard to remember what a dramatic change TiVo was from the TV status quo. Before TiVo, people had to either catch a show right as it aired, or hope that the cassette in their VCR didn’t run out of tape. Suddenly, people had the ability to digitally record shows and store them in perpetuity. Within a few years, they could even record on two channels at once.
  • Social media – While sites like Twitter and Facebook didn’t change TV directly, they did change the way people talk about and experience television. Instead of waiting until the next day to talk about a show at work, people can share their reactions to a show as it airs, and potentially reach millions of people in the process.

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Sources

  1. http://screencrave.com/2011-09-27/eight-ways-television-has-changed-from-the-30s-to-today/

3 Unnecessary TV Technology Features

With so many TVs on the market, and new technology being uncovered every year, it can be tough to decide which technologies you need — and which ones you can live without. You have to choose between different display qualities, different remotes, and a bunch of other features that you may not understand or ever even use. Here are three of the latest advancements in TV technology today that haven’t quite lived up to their expectations, so you can leave them behind without a second thought.

  • 3D technology — There was a lot of hype about 3D televisions, but each one has failed to be everything it was cracked up to be. Sure, it sounds fun at first, but the reality is that it is a wasted feature because it is rarely used. So, unless you absolutely have to have it, mark it off the list of requirements.
  • Screen curvature — Curved screens have promised to be the greatest in display quality, but, thus far, they have under-delivered. The display isn’t much different than a flat panel and, in some instances, the picture gets a bit distorted. It’s much safer to stick with the tried-and-true flat panel TVs.
  • Voice control — This is one more feature that promised the world — and has yet to truly deliver. Pushing remote buttons is always going to be the first choice of most viewers, instead of trying to remember the right command or gesture to get the TV to respond.

Contact us today at Replacement Remotes to learn more about the latest in TV technology, and let us help you find a quality replacement for your remote.