MechanicalMan (Springfield, MO): The set is very light and easy to set up; 3 screws in the bottom to attach the fixed base, and you're good to go...simply plug the cable into the rear of the set and plug the set into an outlet. Once you turn the TV on, programming instructions will appear; use the fast start guide as a reference. The set will auto-tune your cable provider's channels (I have Verizon FIOS), and you can either manually set the color, contrast, ratio, etc. or utilize the factory preset.
E. Anne Withrow "Maxanne" (Columbus, OH USA) : It's hard to find a small TV with decent picture quality, and this 19 inch Samsung is about as good as it gets in that respect. I bought it mainly to use while walking on my treadmill, where I'm looking at the screen from a couple of feet back. I'd actually have preferred a 15 or 16 inch TV for this purpose, and I also own a current model, 16 inch Viewsonic that I could have used. But the Samsung's picture is way better; the Viewsonic is washed out by comparison, and if you're not directly in front of the Viewsonic, it gets worse. This seems to be a problem with 15-16 inch TVs in general, based on other reviews on Amazon.
Richard Thompson : it appears Samsung doesn't offer these features on any TV smaller than 32 inches. That's a shame, because if you think about it, the places where you'd want a small TV (kitchens? bathrooms?) are probably the very places where you don't want several pieces of equipment and a tangle of cables. Even though the Roku interface is better than the comparatively sluggish "Smart TV" features on one of my larger Samsung sets, I'd have rather not had to dangle the extra cables off my treadmill to connect a Roku box. A smaller TV with Netflix -- and wifi -- would make perfect sense. Are you listening, Samsung? (Vizio makes one, though admittedly, it's 24 inches -- I might have bought it if it were smaller.)


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