Smart TV - how long updated?
Author
Discussion

mawallace

Original Poster:

184 posts

95 months

Sunday 26th March 2023
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Thinking of buying a new SMART TV.

What manufacture supports and updates their TV's for the longest. Any ideas - or hints.?

thecremeegg

2,076 posts

225 months

Sunday 26th March 2023
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No real answer to that really, could change at any moment.
My LG oled is still updated, 6 years later if that helps?

Ultimately, you can just buy a plug-in dongle or an Apple TV should it stop being updated

anonymous-user

76 months

Sunday 26th March 2023
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Think my Samsung is now 7 years old and still gets updates.

abzmike

11,207 posts

128 months

Sunday 26th March 2023
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My Sony is 8 years old and I don’t think I’ve ever updated it. Should I?

Lucas Ayde

4,072 posts

190 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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Don't buy a TV for the Smart features ... proprietary OSes never have the same capabilities or update support as a mainstream OS like Android TV, Amazon Fire TV or Apple TV.

But - even if the set runs a mainstream OS, chances are that the computing spec of the TV is minimal and it won't receive updates for more than 3-4 years after release.

eg. I have an old Sony Bravia from 2015 that stopped getting updates years ago .. it runs Android TV and is stuck around 2-3 versions back compared to my NVidia Shield boxes. It still works OK but doesn't support all modern apps and the performance overall is very poor which is annoying as it all runs on top of the Android OS, even just normal TV viewing. I also have an older 2013 vintage Samsung which has some sort of Samsung proprietary OS and is absolutely rubbish for Smart functions (even from the day I bought it) but the Smart part is only an afterthought and the TV treats it like a built-in dongle that you can switch to rather than actually running day to day on top of the platform like most modern Smart TVs do. Hence, it doesn't bother me in the least and is actually my favourite set.


Buy on the actual native features of the TV and if possible get one with the most minamlist Smart OS that you can. Just buy an external dongle/box for Smart functions. They tend to be more powerful, better supported and in the worst case that they eventually stop getting support you can just buy the latest and greatest new box when needed.

jesusbuiltmycar

5,038 posts

276 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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Just before Xmas I bought a small 24" RCA one for the kitchen with the intention that it would never be plugged into an aerial and only ever connected to WiFi.

Its was crap. Really slow to start up, loads of latency between button pushes on the remote and something happening, continuously dropped the WiFi connection and regularly lost the credentials (how???).

In the end it went back for a refund and I got a Samsung one which so far has been perfect (responsive, not lost a connection).

wyson

3,907 posts

126 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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Get one with an inbuilt Roku if you are worried about updates and must have it all built in.

Otherwise I’d do what the others suggested. Buy a TV based on its panel / sound quality first.

Then plug in a Google TV, Roku, Apple TV or whatever suits you and ignore your TV’s smart features. Replace these devices once they fall out of support. The TV itself will outlast any of these smart devices. One of my Samsung TV’s is 12 years old now and courtesy of a Roku Smart Stick that cost £35, is very much upto date in terms of smart features.

Edited by wyson on Monday 27th March 16:05

Harpoon

2,388 posts

236 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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Would agree with the previous poster. We've got a Sony Bravia which is around 13 years old. Sony / BBC stopped supporting iPlayer on it years ago but a £30 Amazon Fire Stick 4k solves that cheaply and easily.

98elise

31,211 posts

183 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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I'm definately in the camp of buying your preferred plug in smart device rather than hoping a TV will update.

We use Chromecast and even the earliest one we bought is still working fine. That's on a mix of smart and dumb TVs. Even our expensive smart TV in the living room has one plugged into it.

boxst

3,806 posts

167 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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I will just repeat what everyone else says: Buy a TV for the picture and sound quality and get an Amazon Fire stick (cheap, really good) or Apple TV (Not cheap, still good).

Lucas Ayde

4,072 posts

190 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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'Chromecast with Google TV' is also very good. Basically Android TV with a slightly nicer interface, on a pebble-shaped dongle. On offer at £25 (down from £35) at the moment too:

https://store.google.com/product/chromecast_google...

craigjm

20,356 posts

222 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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It’s not possible to say how long apps get updated for. Generally it’s 6-7 years but often it’s an app that goes out of service not the whole OS. For instance ITV latest update to ITVX is not available on any Samsung TV prior to 2016. Other apps continue to update though.

Grumps.

16,665 posts

58 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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Yes we have a 2016 Panny and ITV have fked people over again with ITVX not being compatible with it.

Luckily I have a new M1 MBA that we use with a bluetooth keyboard and mouse and works a treat with an HDMI adapter!

silentbrown

10,336 posts

138 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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An old Xbox One works well as a 'smart TV'. All the usual iPlayer etc apps, plays DVD/Bluray, and still gets updated regularly.