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Electronic M 05-17-2012 07:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RCAkid (Post 3035515)
Perhaps one may not wish to jump to conclusions any time too soon. Ikea has teamed up with a Chinese manufacturer to make hdtv consoles.

Here is the link to the article. http://www.investorplace.com/2012/04...includes-a-tv/

Gotta love the title of that linked article "IKEA’s New TV Console Includes a TV" can anyone say 'the new parking lot includes parking'.....Redundant much? :lmao:

sanjarali 05-17-2012 10:38 PM

:nono: Jeffhs+ you are become my people that talk bad of old TV. There is no use for your people and if a punishment could administer for time wasted! :thumbsdn::thumbsdn::thumbsdn: You must are a Sunni who controls nothing of the govermnment. This puts you of the lower caste.

I am sure this is a television of the higher caste, and for this reason you covet! :thumbsdn::thumbsdn: I instead make joy and wonder of this TV. You are gislan! I am sorry the word is not known in American, but you are not useful in American. The great TV should attack you! :banana::banana:

David Roper 05-17-2012 10:42 PM

Wouldn't it be simpler (and more civil) to just say tl;dr?

Einar72 05-18-2012 12:03 AM

IKEA may choose to assemble their new whiz-bang console in Vietnam, where they get some of their big flowerpot/planters from. Cheaper labor than Red China!

As for the old long combos, most people are too young to have ever had one, are too bigoted against American cars, etc, to want one in the first place, or are old and dying off. My parents' generation, who purchased the lion's share of these, are in their 80's now, and are dropping like flies. With the advent of eBay, CL, etc., these become more visible. I just don't have the room for one!

AUdubon5425 05-18-2012 11:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sanjarali (Post 3035569)
Jeffhs...You are gislan!

Better to be gislan than hutyarb! :thmbsp:

Jeffhs 05-19-2012 01:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AUdubon5425 (Post 3035671)
Better to be gislan than hutyarb! :thmbsp:

I still don't know what any of this means. :scratch2: What did I say to deserve this?

DavGoodlin 05-21-2012 12:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Einar72 (Post 3035585)
....
As for the old long combos, most people are too young to have ever had one, are too bigoted against American cars, etc, to want one in the first place, .....

I am guessing that these were popular in their early-mid 60's heyday for the following reasons;
1. More room was taken by a separate HiFi AND a 21"-25" TV.
2. There was no second room in the house for just the TV alone.
3. Console HiFi was popular right after TV, but before separate components were preferred.
4.combo was a "new hifi and TV upgrade" without extra cost of separates.
5. Even better TV sound

I have had only two combos (10L60 Philco and Mag T933 color) amongst over 100 other sets. Sheer size and difficulty moving them made me regret having them. I would make room for the right one, such as a CTC15 RCA (a beauty in French Provincial red mahogany) I repaired one many moons ago for a neighbor. I went to her funeral, tactfully asking the daughter if it was still around.:tears:of course not.

BTW; GISLAN - roughly translated from sanskrit: failure to understand operation of vacuum tubes (CAN BE CURED:music:)
HUTYARB - much worse, is a failure to understand electricity because you cannot see it (see flat-earth society)

Robert Grant 05-26-2012 11:13 PM

I think consoles (which also included radio/phonograph consoles without any TV, as well as with a TV and those with only a TV) were popular before 1970 because people really expected only wood or textiles to be seen in the living room of den of a home. An all-metal or plastic apparatus would have looked as out-of-place in the living room as a printing press or an x-ray machine.

About 1970, people started to see (or perceive) component audio equipment as superior (or at least a better value) to audio equipment in wooden furniture, so it became acceptable to have a chrome panel on a plain box in the bookcase.

About 1980, they started selling TV sets in black plastic and chrome, and any home entertainment electronics in wood suddenly looked out-of-date.


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