Reddit Reddit reviews Tyler TTV703 10" Portable Widescreen LCD TV with Detachable Antennas, USB/SD Card Slot, Built in Digital Tuner, and AV Inputs

We found 2 Reddit comments about Tyler TTV703 10" Portable Widescreen LCD TV with Detachable Antennas, USB/SD Card Slot, Built in Digital Tuner, and AV Inputs. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Portable Audio & Video
Electronics
Portable & Handheld TVs
Tyler TTV703 10
Check price on Amazon

2 Reddit comments about Tyler TTV703 10" Portable Widescreen LCD TV with Detachable Antennas, USB/SD Card Slot, Built in Digital Tuner, and AV Inputs:

u/BlueVerse · 5 pointsr/VIDEOENGINEERING

This sounds like one of those crazy ideas that some sales or marketing peep comes up with that seems stupid-easy to the non-tech, but winds up giving us nightmares.

Even if you solve all the streaming, bandwidth, and connectivity issues (and don't forget, wifi that's perfectly stable during testing can easily go to hell when an audience shows up with their phones and laptops trying to hit the network as well...), it would be unwatchable due to lag with playback or any 'live' source like a camera. The only thing you could use it for would be graphics, since even with the best streaming connections you'd still be seconds out of sync with reality.

Also, iPads demand to be played with. You establish a connection and a stream to each device, and then throw it out on a table. The first person that picks it up is going to hit home and start swiping around. How do they get back to the stream seamlessly and without assistance? Are these their personal devices or are they strictly for show and you lock them down completely, even to the point of putting them in enclosures to prevent physical button access?

Are using the actual iPads a necessity? I've done old-school wired set-ups where we distribute a signal to a monitor on every table. It's not as sexy as seeing it on your own iPad, but it scratches the itch for having the content 'in your face'.

For something wireless, what about a small-scale local broadcast DTV signal to a couple dozen of something like these?

u/theweakestman · 1 pointr/starterpacks

What does American health care have to do with capitalism? Unfortunately, it's corporatism, or even socialism. The government pays for 2/3rds of health care costs. How is that even remotely a "capitalistic" system?

http://www.pnhp.org/news/2016/january/government-funds-nearly-two-thirds-of-us-health-care-costs-american-journal-of-pub

>Anyway I'm only responding if you cite evidence for your claims, starting with healthcare.

Healthcare is a government entity in America. It's an example of socialism, mostly.

Let's look at TVs. By your model, they should get worse, have less features, be less efficient overt time, apparently.

The price of this 10 inch piece of shit TV in 1948 was 325$
http://www.tvhistory.tv/1948-Grinnell-p26.JPG

It didn't do much, didn't have a remote and was in black and white. By your logic, as far as I can tell, the TV should now be in 7 inch, and be only in black. This TV would cost today $3,391. It also weighs a shit ton.

Now, here's a TV from today. 10 Inch. 89$ Light as a feather, in color, gets a bazillion stations, has a remote control and has internet access.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06XYW8M5Y/ref=psdc_979930011_t1_B001OXKPDO

Are you really arguing this, or are you arguing because you're retarded?