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Samsung UN55B7000 LCD HDTV:
The Samsung has two USB inputs that you can use to play back photos, music, and video (even HD video) that’s recorded in a compatible format. DLNA is also available to play back material that’s stored on your computer through your home network.
A feature called BD Wise lets a compatible Samsung disc player talk to the set and automatically optimizes a number of operating parameters. For example, it can determine which component—the player or the set—will do a better job in video processing the source, and then it will automatically set the player’s output resolution accordingly. While the Samsung’s onscreen menus are good, I have some minor quibbles. The most significant of these is that they time out too fast, which can be a significant problem when you’re trying to calibrate the gray scale and color space. While you’re making individual calibration adjustments, the menus for each setting are at the bottom of the screen where you can see them, but they’re out of the way of the measuring device. But before you can complete the measurement, those menus time out and you return to the previous full-screen menu that blocks the instrument.
Like all 120-Hz sets I know of, the Samsung offers frame interpolation to reduce motion lag. Samsung’s name for this feature is Auto Motion Plus 120Hz. When it’s switched on, the set interpolates the added frames rather than simply repeating them. This process offers several operating modes. The Custom mode provides an interesting option. It has separate, adjustable controls for Judder (for film-based material) and Blur (for video sources). You can set these so that film-based sources are processed only for blur. This leaves the motion characteristics of film intact while still smoothing motion on video material. It also helps alleviate my main issue with frame interpolation: making filmed material look like video. Nevertheless, I did not use Auto Motion Plus 120Hz in this review. The Samsung lets you watch Internet TV through the Yahoo! Widget Engine for services like stock monitoring, photo sharing, news, and weather. To use this feature, you need a direct connection to the Internet via an Ethernet cable to your modem or a wired or wireless connection through your home network. The available Internet widgets appear to be more limited than the widgets that are offered on a Panasonic HDTV we reviewed recently (the TC-P46G10, HT, July 2009), but it’s likely that Samsung will add more later.
Two Samples
When the set’s audio was working, its quality was adequate but below average for a flat-panel display. If you use an external sound system, this won’t matter. However, be sure that your system has lip sync (audio delay)—good advice with any new digital display. Most video processing delays the image long enough to produce a small but annoying audio/video disconnect. This isn’t usually an issue with the set’s own sound because the design provides a fixed delay to compensate for it. However, subsequent experience indicates that these two problems were limited to early production samples that will be history by the time this review hits the streets.
Video Processing and Stuff
The Samsung reproduces above white and below black. In its Screen Fit mode (not available for SD sources or 720p component), it produced a precise 1:1 pixel map, with no cropping. The Warm2 Color Tone setting was much more accurate than we usually see on sets out of the box. While I watched the set in this state for much of the testing (with no real complaints about its color), the following comments reflect my observations after a full calibration.
Aziz, LEDs!
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Poetry in Motion?

