LCD TVs Keep Getting Larger And Larger

When I was young, my parents and I watched television in the living room. We watched the same television programs, and my parents usually chose them. We didn’t have remote controls, and we didn’t have LCD TVs. I didn’t have a television set in my bedroom, like a lot of children do these days. I couldn’t go into the family room to watch television, because we didn’t have a family room either. We watched a black and white set, and we had to get up from the sofa to change the channels and adjust the volume.

A lot of things have changed over time, and television is one of them. It has changed in a variety of ways as well. Televisions have changed. Instead of black and white televisions with antennas, we now have LCD TVs with satellite or cable programming. Television programming has changed. You can see things on prime time television now that you could have never seen back when I was a kid. Luckily, television also allows us to block certain channels from the sets that our children watch - which brings me to another point. When I was a child, my family had one television set in the house. Today, it is not uncommon to find several televisions in the home. There is one in the living room, one in the family room, one in mom and dad’s bedroom, and one in each of the kids’ bedrooms. Yes, many children have their own television sets now. They may simply watch television on them, or they may have video game consoles or DVD players connected to them.

Televisions have changed in size as well. LCD TVs keep getting larger and larger. The most common sizes are 20, 23, and 30 inches, which is measured diagonally from an upper corner to the opposite lower corner. However, some are much larger. Sharp recently introduced a 65” LCD television, and word has it that Panasonic is producing a television with a 150” screen.

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