Because this gets them views. We’ve been down this road before. Nobody at Linus likes these clickbaity titles they have to use for videos, but this is what people click and watch, which is what generates them money.
Because this gets them views. We’ve been down this road before. Nobody at Linus likes these clickbaity titles they have to use for videos, but this is what people click and watch, which is what generates them money.
This is extremely difficult to do by eye. Typically most TVs will have a “cinema” preset (or called something similar) which is typically the most color accurate mode and will get you 90% of the way to a good picture.
Actually, I do think that you may be able to stack the Playstation offer - at least you used to be able to in the past unless they changed it.
I think yes, to a point. Certain standards like button placements and navigations should be standardized. Some functionality, like holding down the select button for more options, should also be enforced.
That being said, I don’t think all streaming service UIs need to look exactly the same.
I do think that Apple should tighten down their update checks. Sometimes they let an app update through that breaks HDR or Atmos and it would be great if they tested these things more thoroughly.
The Apple TV HD is much, much worse in every way. It’s a really old repackaged model from like 2015 that Apple hasn’t bothered updating. Definitely get any of the Apple TV 4K models, even the first-gen 4K is better.
The HD doesn’t get:
4K support (1080p max resolution)
HDR/Dolby Vision
Dolby Atmos
Worse connection speeds (100 Mbit max on the HD, 1000 Mbit on 4K, slower wifi and bluetooth as well on the HD)
No Homepod support
No smart home stuff
The CPU is much slower with an A8 (HD) vs the A15 (4K). Literally seven CPU generations slower.
I would not even remotely consider the Apple TV HD unless it was like $20. It’s outdated in pretty much every way possible. The Apple TV 4K is modern hardware, and will remain modern for at least 5+ years from now. My parents inherited my first-gen Apple TV 4K and that box is still fairly modern by todays standards, and is better than the Apple TV HD.
It supports Dolby Atmos in the Dolby Digital Plus format (which is what all streamers such as Netflix/Disney+/etc. uses).
It does not support the height metadata of Dolby Atmos using TrueHD (such as from blu-rays) but you can still play those tracks as 7.1 surround, just without the height speakers. Typically, I would recommend the Infuse app, which handles all the high definition audio formats really well.