Selecting the right TV size for your TV lift cabinet is essential for achieving the perfect balance of functionality and aesthetics. Whether you're upgrading your entertainment setup or choosing a lift cabinet for the first time, ensuring the TV fits properly inside the unit is crucial. Here’s a step-by-step guide to help you determine the ideal TV size for your TV lift cabinet.
1. Measure the Interior Dimensions of Your Lift Cabinet
Before purchasing a TV, check the interior width, height, and depth of your TV lift cabinet. The TV must fit comfortably within these dimensions to ensure smooth operation. If your cabinet includes additional storage or compartments, make sure those don’t interfere with the available space for the TV.
2. Consider the Overall TV Dimensions, Not Just Screen Size
TV sizes are typically measured diagonally (e.g., 50-inch, 65-inch), but that measurement does not include the frame and bezels. Be sure to look up the exact width, height, and depth of your TV model
While Apple is busy keeping their planning under wraps, the rest of us are busy trying to discover what they are up to, especially when it comes to their iTV.
What has been leaked through the grapevine is that Samsung Electronics in Korea has started producing chips for the iTVs since November 2011. Sharp also is rumored to be producing the displays for the new TVs. The screens will be relatively small for the initial introductory phase at between 32 and 37 inches and will be better suited for the small foot of the bed TV lift cabinets.
Sterne Agee Analyst Shaw Wu wrote, ““We continue to hear what AAPL would love to do is offer users the ability to choose their own customized programming, i.e., whichever channels/shows they want for a monthly subscription fee. This is obviously much more complicated from a licensing standpoint. And in our view, would change the game for television and give AAPL a big leg-up against the competition.”
Wu goes on to write about how the biggest obstacle
While Apple is busy keeping their planning under wraps, the rest of us are busy trying to discover what they are up to, especially when it comes to their iTV.
What has been leaked through the grapevine is that Samsung Electronics in Korea has started producing chips for the iTVs since November 2011. Sharp also is rumored to be producing the displays for the new TVs. The screens will be relatively small for the initial introductory phase at between 32 and 37 inches and will be better suited for the small foot of the bed TV lift cabinets.
Sterne Agee Analyst Shaw Wu wrote, ““We continue to hear what AAPL would love to do is offer users the ability to choose their own customized programming, i.e., whichever channels/shows they want for a monthly subscription fee. This is obviously much more complicated from a licensing standpoint. And in our view, would change the game for television and give AAPL a big leg-up against the competition.”
Wu goes on to write about how the biggest obstacle