Putting all your set-top boxes, games consoles inside a closed cabinet. Not great for heat dissipation and therefore reliability. Also not good for allowing the remote controls to work.
I don't think Ikea have bothered with putting a top quality screen in there. I expect Apple to care more about such things if they release a TV.
Quite fittingly green of Ikea: Recycling the radiogram concept:
Actually my grandmother still has a unit that has a radio, TV and record player with speakers built into it. You are right, it is nothing new but we really don't have a great solution right now.
Putting all your set-top boxes, games consoles inside a closed cabinet. Not great for heat dissipation and therefore reliability. Also not good for allowing the remote controls to work.
Actually my grandmother still has a unit that has a radio, TV and record player with speakers built into it. You are right, it is nothing new but we really don't have a great solution right now.
The issue with everything being built into the TV is that "smart TV" equipment needs to be updated a lot more often than a TV itself does.
Hence all the HDMI inputs.
I'd be more worried about the screen itself going bad, and having to throw out the furniture with it
Then again, a lot of us grew up with... see above.
Sure, but if you're gonna plug in all your stuff via HDMI that defeats the purpose of the all-in-one.
Depends on what you buy I guess. When it comes to TVs I like to buy high end models from good brands which I know will last me ages.
And there's a reason that nowadays we buy things separately, because it may be less convenient to set up but in the long run it's a better way of doing it (IMO at least).
So was this a serious post?
This is like saying Archos (or Black & Decker, Lol) beat Apple to the media player market. Meaningless.
A lot of Apple's competition arrives first to the market with something - though IKEA doing it is just comedic. In any case, most of them are promptly forgotten when Apple shows up. Guess why.
I like IKEA products but I'm not really seeing this as a good fit. The question for me is the quality of the TV good.
What about when you want to get a new TV, you'll be stuck buying the components if you don't choose another IKEA TV?
The title seems to imply that Apple couldn't make it to the TV market before Ikea did. That is not the case. Apple could've made a TV by now if they wanted to. Ikea probably could've made a TV earlier too. In the end, does it matter? I don't see how being first gives anyone a huge advantage (if any advantage at all). Success depends on the product, company, ect. We all know that if Apple released a TV it'd sell more than this Ikea one.