I bought Sony KDL-42W670A.

About:
The crown of Bravia 2013 line-up was undoubtedly the 4K Ultra HD XBR LED series. Yet it wasn't what the average consumer would look to for a new purchase with the still novel and rare 4K content.  with the W Series and R Series being the LED LCD line-up. R Series provides a more economy friendly TVs across the 32" to 60" with a more stripped down specifications. Which leaves us with the W Series that would compete in the mass consumer market.

I would say KDL-42W670A is a great option if 3D and one-touch Sony Xperia phone mirroring aren't what you look for and SGD 1k is roughly your budget. Otherwise, the W954A would  certainly represents a absolutely superb option.

Having said that KDL-42W670A is still offers the latest Sony technology with X-Reality™ PRO image processing engine and Motionflow (200Mhz), just about most features you find in a 2013 TV model and most importantly, a great panel with terrific picture quality.
Highlights of KDL-42W670A:
  • 42" LED LCD
  • 1080p support
  • 200 Mhz refresh rate
  • DVB-T Tuner
  • 2x HDMI
  • No 3D support
  • No NFC enabled remote control (for direct screen mirroring)

Picture Quality:
In the Bravia's is Sony X-Reality™ PRO image processing engine. It takes the source image and remastering it into some really great picture quality in the price range. Colour performance is great, deep yet bright.
At just SGD 850, it is not all perfect. For one, the colours and contrast might be a tab too unnatural for the less adventurous for the conservatives. Which is the criticism from the sales guys at Courts and Harvey’s while I was there. Also the sharpness could still be a distance away from their more expensive fellow models in the Bravia series. 

Yet most of the time decisions are personal and for me Bravia delivers. Captain Philips on 1080p playback from my NAS, a 10GB file, it was sharp, natural and realistic. The scene in the engine room looks especially satisfying because of how easy this Bravia dealt with the fight between the shipping crew and the Somali pirates in the dark. And this is before any tuning I did.
Aesthetic:
In the department of looks, Sense of Quartz is how Sony describes the 2013 Bravia line up. Which it really is. The slim aluminium bezel and metallic base quite simply defines it. For me the distinctive design stood out from the rest of its competitors and looks the most modern to me.

Unfortunately the other parts of this Bravia aren't consistently good. The significant one is the glowing Sony logo on the base of the TV. The plate is too big, so is the font. As for the glowing part, I am not sure what I think of it. Sometime it distracts me from the movie, other times I thought it look very classy.

One thing I am sure is that the back of the TV does not look very good. The connectivity panel spreads across the lower portion of the TV creating a big area of bulge. The panel is amazingly thin, not these ports. Somewhat reduces the overall thinness of the product and look a tab too cheap. Luckily everything is hidden from the front view.

Smart TV:
There are over 30 apps of which you will probably not use any of them because they are simply too sluggish. DLNA playback is ok but lacks subtitles support and  struggles a little with big files. But then again most Smart TV have the same issues, for me right now the manufacturers are still not getting it  all right with the Smart TV concept.

The current best solution to pipe content to the TV is still a media box. Or screen mirroring?
Screen Mirroring:
With KDL-42W670A you can mirror your devices with wirelessly via the Miracast technology or the wired option of MHL (Mobile High-Definition Link).
With Miracast built-in, the setup is really easy, turn on Miracast service on the TV and screen casting on your device (in my case, Nexus 7 2013), the TV would be shown as a screen which image on your device can be mirrored to. 
While screen mirroring is setup friendly, but the quality of playback isn’t.
I tried with my Nexus 7 2013 16GB and one other Sony Xperia Ultra Z, the Sony Xperia is much clearer and smoother but the end result is just still too pixelated for my liking.  

Some other Features:
KDL-42W670A comes with what Sony calls "Bass Reflex Box Speaker" that is suppose to produce "full-range, distortion-free sound". The outcome is really not bad, clearer than most TV I have come across but really if you have gone to the extend for a quality TV, why don't you add a sound system to it?

Mirroring images from devices is probably one popular feature in recent times. 
Summary:
In a sentence, the KDL-42W670A is a great-looking screen with very good image quality at it's price without much of the other fancy features like NFC for instance.


Full Specifications (Taken from Sony KDL-42W670A - Product Page):
Screen Size 42" (107cm), 16:9
TV System 1 (Digital/Analog): B/G, D/K, I, L, M
Colour System PAL, SECAM, NTSC 3.58, NTSC 4.43
Video Signal 480/60i, 480/60p, 576/50i, 720/50p,576/50p, 720/60p, 1080/50i, 1080/60i, 720/24p (HDMI™ only), 720/30p (HDMI™ only), 1080/24p (HDMI™ only), 1080/30p (HDMI™ only), 1080/60p (HDMI™ / Component), 1080/50p (HDMI™ / Component)
Display Resolution Full HD
Video Processing X-Reality™ PRO
Motionflow™ Motionflow™ XR 200
Backlight Module LED
Live Colour™ Yes
Deep Color Yes
Intelligent MPEG Noise Reduction Yes
MPEG Noise Reduction Yes
Advanced Contrast Enhancer (ACE) Yes
24p True Cinema™ Yes
PhotoTV HD Yes
Viewing Angle 178° (Right/Left), 178° (Up/Down)
Screen Format TV: Auto Wide/ Full/ Normal/ Wide Zoom/ Zoom/ Caption/ 14:9/ PC: Full 1/ Full 2/ Normal
Picture Mode Vivid, Standard, Custom, Photo-Vivid, Photo-Standard, Photo-Original, Photo-Custom, Cinema1, Cinema2, Game-Standard, Game-Original, Graphics, Sports, Animation
CineMotion/Film Mode/Cinema Drive Yes
3D Comb Filter Yes
Sound Mode Standard, Cinema, Sports, Music, Game, Compressed Audio
Sound Enhancer Yes
S-Master Yes
S-Force S-Force Front Surround 3D
Audio Codec Dolby® Digital, Dolby® Digital Plus, Dolby® Pulse, HE-AAC
Simulated Stereo Yes
Stereo System NICAM/A2
Audio Output Power 8W+8W
Speaker Configuration 2ch, Full Range (30x80mm) x2
HDMI™ Connections 2
USB 2.0 1 port
Ethernet Connection 1 (Bottom)
Composite Video Input(s) 2 (1 Rear/1 Bottom Hybrid w/Component)
Component Video (Y/Pb/Pr) Input(s) 1 (Bottom/Hybrid)
RF Connection Input(s) 1 (Side)
Analog Audio Input(s) 2 (1 Rear/1 Bottom)
Digital Audio Output(s) 1 (Bottom)
Audio Out 1 (Side/Hybrid w/HP)
Headphone Out 1 (Side/Hybrid w/Audio Out)
BRAVIA Sync Yes
Fast Zapping Yes
USB Play MPEG1/ MPEG2PS/ MPEG2TS/ AVCHD/ MP4Part10/ MP4Part2/ AVI(XVID)/ AVI(MotionJpeg)/ MOV/ WMV/ MKV/ WEBM/ 3GPP/ MP3/ WMA/ WAV/ JPEG/ MPO
DLNA MPEG1/ MPEG2PS/ MPEG2TS/ AVCHD/ MP4Part10/ MP4Part2/ AVI(XVID)/ AVI(MotionJpeg)/ MOV/ WMV/ MKV/ WEBM/ 3GPP/ MP3/ WMA/ LPCM/ JPEG/ MPO
Picture Frame Mode Yes
Scene Select Photo, Music, Cinema, Game, Graphics, Sports, Animation
Parental Control Yes
Clock Yes
Sleep Timer Yes
On/Off Timer Yes
Teletext Yes
PAP (Picture And Picture) PAP (Variable)
OSD Language Afrikaans/ Arabic/ Persian/ English/ Fench/ Indonesian/ Portuguese/ Russian/ Swahili / Thai/ Vietnamese/ Chinese(Simplified)/ Chinese(Traditional)/ Zulu/ Assamese/ Bengali/ Gujarati/ Hindi/ Kannada/ Malayalam/ Marathi/ Oriya/ Punjabi/ Tamil/ Telugu
TV Guide On Screen / EPG Yes
Screen Mirroring Yes*2
TV Sideview Yes
Wi-Fi Connectivity Yes
Wi-Fi Direct Yes
Skype™ Ready Yes
Internet Video Yes
Facebook and Twitter Yes
Dynamic Backlight Control Yes
Backlight Off Mode Yes
Light Sensor Yes
Power Saving Modes Yes
Power Requirements DC 19.5V
Power Consumption Approx. 84W
Standby Power Consumption Approx. 0.5W
Dimensions (W x H x D) with Stand Approx. 954 x 595 x 197mm
Dimensions (W x H x D) without Stand Approx. 954 x 568 x 69mm
Weight with Stand Approx. 11kg
Weight without Stand Approx. 9.9kg



NewImage

China is a country with a lot of peculiarities. Despite all the piracy or the knack of producing low cost, low quality products, the Chinese government actually celebrate the World Consumer Rights Day (March 15th annually) religiously since 1991!

Through hidden cameras, interviews with consumers and actual product reviews, the producers of the China Consumer Nights managed to put together a very convincing piece that Nikon is indeed selling a defective D600… On their national TV. Oh boy.

Not that Nikon is completely innocent. It is already suffering from similar defects across the world when it made its debut.

In ths video feature, hidden cameras capture Nikon service staff coming up with all sorts of outrageous reasons to the dark spots in the D600’s pictures, ranging from the bad air quality to erm.. you shouldn’t hold your camera tilting downwards!

The next day Shanghai’s government Business governance unit started investigation on the case… And now, Nikon is recalling all D600 in China and afterwards offered replacement for all D600s.

Well done China. 

Link to Tencent News: http://tech.qq.com/a/20140317/010640.htm
Link to Tencent Video: http://static.video.qq.com/TPout.swf?vid=h0014fq932g&auto=0 

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