A nice little 'daylight' lamp placed out of sight behind your LCD TV (and with no reflecting surfaces interferring, so that it provides only 'ambient' light, not direct lighting) does exactly the same thing for your eyes & the perceived contrast benefit for just a couple of £/$.
It's supposed to be easier on your eyes and have a little bit of an improving & amplifying effect on your perception of the contrast level(s).
Done for a few £/$ it's well worth trying (I reckon it's worth it)......
.......but if the 'price' was that you had to buy a Philips LCD TV?
No thanks.
It's been way a long time since too many reviewers thought they were on the leading edge.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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A nice little 'daylight' lamp placed out of sight behind your LCD TV
(and with no reflecting surfaces interferring, so that it provides
only 'ambient' light, not direct lighting)
does exactly the same thing for your eyes & the perceived contrast
benefit for just a couple of £/$.
It's supposed to be easier on your eyes and have a little bit of an
improving & amplifying effect on your perception of the contrast level(s).
Done for a few £/$ it's well worth trying (I reckon it's worth
it)......
.......but if the 'price' was that you had to buy a Philips LCD TV?
No thanks.
It's been way a long time since too many reviewers thought they were
on the leading edge.