http://insidetv.ew.com/2011/11/30/tv-ownership-declines/
Now 114.7 million households have TVs, last year--115.9 million.
Now 114.7 million households have TVs, last year--115.9 million.
easttxtv said:http://insidetv.ew.com/2011/11/30/tv-ownership-declines/
Now 114.7 million households have TVs, last year--115.9 million.
KeithE4 said:easttxtv said:http://insidetv.ew.com/2011/11/30/tv-ownership-declines/
Now 114.7 million households have TVs, last year--115.9 million.
I'm guessing that Nielsen doesn't consider laptops and other PCs with TV tuner cards/USB devices to be "televisions." They should.
FreddyE1977 said:I have kids in their early 20's. Their friends who have already moved out of the house typically do not take a TV with them to the new place. This generation lives pretty much online. I think the decline in TV household percentage is coming from this age group going out on their own and starting to form households.
FreddyE1977 said:I have kids in their early 20's. Their friends who have already moved out of the house
typically do not take a TV with them to the new place. This generation lives pretty much
online. I think the decline in TV household percentage is coming from this age group going
out on their own and starting to form households.
FreddyE1977 said:I have kids in their early 20's. Their friends who have already moved out of the house
typically do not take a TV with them to the new place. This generation lives pretty much
online. I think the decline in TV household percentage is coming from this age group going
out on their own and starting to form households.
It's hard to imagine watching a football match or a film together as a family on a laptop!!
Carmine5 said:Plus, it's pretty well assumed that consumers who were going to purchase HDTVs have already done so. The HDTV market is nearly played out. Manufacturers realize this and are now working on the "next big thing." 3DTV is proving to be a bust but maybe, just maybe, consumers will bite when SHDTV with its 2160p picture eventually rolls out (the other thing they're working on is an Super HDTV with a 4K resolution picture).
Probably by that time, broadcasters will have migrated to ATSC 2.0 or 3.0 and the tuners in our current HDTVs will have been rendered obsolete anyway.
FreddyE1977 said:It's hard to imagine watching a football match or a film together as a family on a laptop!!
A recent trip to Sam's Club taught me that monitors and HDTV sets are merging into
pretty much the same thing. You'll just feed your laptop video to a much larger screen.
FreddyE1977 said:It's hard to imagine watching a football match or a film together as a family on a laptop!!
A recent trip to Sam's Club taught me that monitors and HDTV sets are merging into
pretty much the same thing. You'll just feed your laptop video to a much larger screen.
nomadcowatbk said:Carmine5 said:Plus, it's pretty well assumed that consumers who were going to purchase HDTVs have already done so. The HDTV market is nearly played out. Manufacturers realize this and are now working on the "next big thing." 3DTV is proving to be a bust but maybe, just maybe, consumers will bite when SHDTV with its 2160p picture eventually rolls out (the other thing they're working on is an Super HDTV with a 4K resolution picture).
Probably by that time, broadcasters will have migrated to ATSC 2.0 or 3.0 and the tuners in our current HDTVs will have been rendered obsolete anyway.
A lot of people will not be replacing their 15 year old 27'' inch tube TVs until they break. Certain brands of tube TVs will be working long after they are obsolete.
Carmine5 said:maybe, just maybe, consumers will bite when SHDTV with its 2160p picture eventually rolls out (the other thing they're working on is an Super HDTV with a 4K resolution picture).
nomadcowatbk said:Certain brands of tube TVs will be working long after they are obsolete.