Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. s

If you hate TV, you’re doing it wrong

Add as a preferred source on Google

Cruise the “roommates wanted” section of Craigslist Portland and you’ll find would-be roomies who keep backyard chickens, make a living selling nipple jewelry on Etsy, and compost their own feces. So I really shouldn’t have been surprised when I met a couple, years back, who banned television from their living room because it was “antisocial.”

Well-meaning, barnwood-upcycling, urban-hop-farming Portlanders that they were, they slid a couch in front of a wall instead. No one ever sat there.

Recommended Videos

Well, almost no one. On the rare occasion someone from the house ventured over to the brick-like Ikea slab of a sofa, it was to read a book on their own or watch Netflix … on an iPad. How social.

A truly smart TV is collaborative.

Our heroic conversation crusaders had it backwards: It’s more tech, not less, that can make your living room a place to congregate, share ideas, and be social. And a smarter TV is a good place to start.

TV has a well-earned reputation for being a mind-melting, conversation-killer that sucks the attention of everyone in the room in like a black hole. Who hasn’t caught themselves at a bar gazing up at a TV playing Duck Dynasty in the corner because … oh look, moving colors!

I get the neophyte reaction to this problem. Give me a wood fire over just about any other form of entertainment. But if I’m going to have a TV in my living room — and I do because my landlord doesn’t like me setting fires on the floor — it’s going to do a lot more than flip between channels.

What currently lurks below my living-room television is an ancient PC from about 2006, running Windows 8, and a Lenovo media controller. And it has made my living room a better place to fill with friends and talk, not just a spot to stare at Black Mirror on Netflix while I stuff my face alone on a Tuesday night. (Though I do that too.)

Samsung-Smart-TV-HUB_
Image used with permission by copyright holder

I ended up with this setup years ago for a reason that had nothing to do with the noble goal of sharing: The earliest set-top boxes like Roku and Apple TV couldn’t do what I wanted. Sure, I could get Netflix, but some stuff just demanded a computer. Like South Park, the live comedy specials Louie C.K. lets you download for $5 apiece, and those episodes of Game of Thrones that mysteriously arrived on a thumb drive.

A computer could play all of those things, but the best applications have been those I never imagined when I heaved this hulk under my TV. Friends take turns dialing up different songs on Spotify. Everyone wants to pitch their favorite YouTube video on the big screen. Before a night out, we can Yelp where we want to go — collectively on the big screen, instead of staring into our smartphones. When guests visit from out of town, the TV becomes a virtual wall map I can use to show them around town.

A truly smart TV is collaborative. My girlfriend and I just plotted most of an upcoming vacation on my TV, perusing destinations on Google Maps, previewing them through YouTube videos, browsing lodging on Airbnb, and looking up flights on Kayak. It can also be productive, like when I use it to look up recipes and reference them without washing my flour-caked hands, or watch instructional bike repair videos with my bike in front of me on the floor.

I still prefer my full PC to a true smart TV or set-top box, but off-the-shelf solutions are getting closer to doing all the things I want. WebOS has a slick full Web browser, Samsung’s Smart TVs come with a Skype app, and Amazon’s Fire TV even has party games like the classic You Don’t Know Jack trivia.

Yes, your TV could help you connect to family members across the country or get a party rolling.

Smart-TV-trivia-games
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It’s easy to fixate on tiny personal screens now, whether on smartphones or tablets or laptops. But it turns out that a big one — a screen you can kick back in front of, drink a beer before, but still interact with is inherently social. It’s the fireplace of 2015, except instead of scaring animals away and cooking food, it shows hot restaurant recommendations and plays videos of people falling off roofs.

So don’t brag that “you don’t watch TV” just because you do it through Netflix on an iPad in bed. Get a TV. A big one. One so big it consumes half the wall and has your friends joking that you’re overcompensating. Then connect a computer to it, put away the history textbook you were smugly pretending to read, crack a beer, and enjoy that sucker with friends.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Nothing’s next budget earbuds are coming for boring AirPods clones
Nothing Ear (3a) may bring back some personality to budget earbuds
Nothing Ear (a) deal

Budget wireless earbuds are the most popular kind of wearable tech in the market. But just like smartphones, a lot of these hearables basically look quite similar to one another. Nothing has actively worked on avoiding that trap, and its next affordable earbuds are expected to keep the track going.

The company has just confirmed that Nothing Ear (3a) will launch on July 7 at 11:00 BST, sharing the stage with the upcoming Nothing Phone (4b). The teaser does not reveal the full spec sheet yet, but it does show the earbuds in four colors: White, Black, Yellow, and Pink. Nothing’s audio lineup has always leaned on transparent styling and playful color choices to stand out in a sea of AirPods clones.

Read more
Sony’s WH-1000XM6 headphones just became more tempting for gamers who hate gaming headsets
The new update adds Bluetooth LE Audio's Gaming Audio Profile, giving Sony's premium noise-canceling cans a lower-latency trick for compatible gaming devices.
Sony WH-1000XM6.

Sony's WH-1000XM6 gaming mode is rolling out through firmware version 3.1.5, adding support for Bluetooth LE Audio's Gaming Audio Profile, or GMAP. The same update also includes general performance improvements, so WH-1000XM6 owners have a real reason to open the Sony Sound Connect app.

It's a handy upgrade for headphones built more for commutes or office silence than late-night matches. Bluetooth lag can make games feel faintly wrong, especially when a footstep or button press lands a fraction too late.

Read more
Acer’s 1,000Hz gaming monitor is real, expensive, and stuck waiting on a launch date
The Amazon listing confirms the $699.99 price, while the display remains temporarily out of stock.
Electronics, Screen, Computer Hardware

Acer’s 1,000Hz gaming monitor has moved from announcement to Amazon listing. The XV273U F5 is priced at $699.99, giving competitive players a real number to weigh before one of the fastest displays headed to North America actually ships.

Availability is still the problem. Amazon lists the monitor as temporarily out of stock, and Acer has previously pointed to a Q4 North America launch window instead of a firm release date.

Read more