The good: The beautifully thin Samsung UNES8000 LED TV
seems to have come from a year or two in the future. Its massive
feature set includes a touch-pad remote, IR blaster, four pairs of 3D
glasses, motion and voice command, and the industry's most capable Smart
TV platform. Its picture quality boasts superb color accuracy along
with industry-leading video processing and 3D performance.
The bad: Lighter
black levels and imperfect screen uniformity hamper its picture
significantly, especially for such an expensive TV. Samsung charges too
much for extra features that are largely unnecessary and poorly
implemented.
The bottom line: Although it hits plenty of high points, the Samsung UNES8000 LED TV cannot ultimately justify its high price.he Samsung UNES8000 LED TV boasts stunning design and more features
than any TV on the market. For that you'll pay dearly, but if you can
afford it and want the cutting edge of TV technology in your living room
-- pre-OLED, at least -- then stop reading now and buy an ES8000.
But maybe you're wondering about how its picture stacks up against the
competition, or about how much further your TV experience will be taken
by spending the extra dough. OK, fine, keep reading. The Samsung
UNES8000 isn't a bad performer by any means, but it's not much better
than many LCDs and plasmas, and worse than you might expect from
Samsung's highest-end LED TV. It's also more expensive than just about
any TV available today, with the exception of a few models with full-array local dimming. Finally its standout feature, which allows you to control the TV with a wave or a word, just doesn't work all that well. Few TVs can approach the Samsung UNES8000's "wow" factor, but few also come with such significant caveats.
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