Hi there!

So I am looking to buy a new TV, but the latest smart-TVs all seem to be very bloated with ads and other ridiculous and unnecessary features. I know very little about TVs, and therefore wondering if anyone has any tips on some good TVs that include as little bloat as possible.

Thanks for any recommendations or tips!

-6 points

No one forces you to use that stuff. I don’t think I’ve ever used my TV menus. I have a chromestick and I just cast everything from my phone. I could have the smartest TV in the world for all I know, I don’t care.

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24 points

The most recent Samsung TV we got has built in adds on the home screen, i do not want to see ads when ive used hundreds of euros to buy the TV already. Not much I can do to avoid that.

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5 points

Don’t connect it to the internet?

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7 points

It’s the old adage.

“This TV kicks you in the balls when you turn it on. Unless you don’t connect it to the internet.”

Fuck that. I’d rather buy a dumb TV, but there are few of them these days.

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7 points

You can setup PiHole to block Samsung’s ad servers. Some routers give you the option to block specific websites, that works, too.

The site you have to block:

  • samsungads dot com
  • samsungtvads dot com
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18 points

While this is a fantastic suggestion, and pi-hole is amazing, we shouldn’t be in the position where this is required just to use a darn TV.

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3 points

Can’t you just not connect it to the Internet?

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26 points

Not really. TVs are subsidized by ads and data collection, so they all have this crap. The more reputable brands do have better UX and may let you opt out of some of it, but not all.

My recommendation is to buy the TV with the best hardware features that you want. Once you get it, connect it once via Ethernet and update it to get all the most up to date features and fixes. Then disconnect it from Ethernet and connect a smart TV box like Apple TV or the nVidia Shield and use that.

Your experience will be better, the UI will be simpler, and you don’t have to worry about all the ads and spyware.

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Definitely not the case with Chinese products. Cheap is king

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3 points

What do you mean?

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6 points

all the most up to date features and fixes

Genuinely, what features and fixes could a TV possibly get from the internet besides applications that require an internet connection? If you’re using an external device to watch your stuff, why would you need to update your TV?

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5 points

For my Sony TV, updates have improved performance if I bothered to use the built in Android TV interface and it enabled 4K variable refresh rate support for things like the PS5.

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2 points

Bug fixes, menu options, improvements to audio processing, etc.

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5 points

Just speculating, but firmware updates might be useful. Some display resolutions, refresh rates, VRR, etc might not have been programmed correctly and later fixed. They could add new features like offsetting pixels slightly differently over time to reduce colour burn in or something that might reduce warranty claims (I don’t really expect them to add more value to the TV through new features unless it would help them financially).

That said, I’ve never connected my current TV to the internet and it’s been fine. I’d suggest trying an update if your TV does something annoying or isn’t working as well as you’d like. You can also read about your model online to see if there are any updates available and what they do to determine if you want them.

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4 points

This is a great tip, thanks!

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25 points

Get one with a good panel and ignore the “Smart” part. Better use something like a Fire TV Stick.

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14 points

Firesticks are also full of ads and tracking. It’d be more ideal to use something like a Raspberry Pi or building an Android TV box instead as a media client.

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12 points

I can recommend the Apple TV. Even the android TV ones have ads now (looking at you shield tv!).

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5 points

I more meant along the lines of building an HTPC then putting Android on it, so that wouldn’t have ads. But yeah an Apple TV is definitely an easier plug-and-play solution. I am more of a DIY type of person.

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3 points

This is the answer, dongle love all the way!

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-2 points

Buy a projector instead. Most don’t have any of the “smart” spyware that TVs do yet. Plus you get like a 4x bigger screen for for half the price

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6 points

Projector quality is garbage compared to TVs. Even in movie theaters, my OLED TV looks so much better than any theater.

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2 points

I’ve had a TCL Roku tv for a while and I love it. There’s really only one ad and it’s off to the side of the list of apps, so really non-intrusive.

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2 points

You can actually block adds on roku through a secret menu in the settings

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3 points

Can you elaborate on this secret method?

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2 points

The Roku secret menu can be found on Roku devices only, and you can adjust what ads you see through it by clicking the home button 5 times, pressing up,right,down,left, and toggling different advertisement settings once the menu opens.Jun 22, 2023

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2 points

Same, but I have that one ad blocked with PiHole so it just an empty rectangular box.

The only thing I don’t like is the crappy remote and the fact that “they” switch my theme.

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