Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Spaghetti-free TV dinners

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Cordless television sets? The future is already here if the Russians are right, writes David Behrens.

The Russian firm says the technology opens up possibilit­ies far beyond the TV screen.

Perhaps, like me, you have looked at pictures in magazines of wall-mounted TV screens in immaculate­ly choreograp­hed living rooms, and wondered how they managed to hide all the wires. The chances are, they didn’t. Because while bolting your television to the chimney breast is easy enough if you’re handy with a Black and Decker, concealing the two platefuls of spaghetti that connect it to the mains, the internet and your settop box is a different matter.

The profession­al solution is to get the builders in, chisel out a vertical channel down the wall and then plaster and paint over it once the cables are in place. That’s obviously not something you want to do every time you buy an extra piece of kit.

Plastic trunking is another option, but it seldom enhances your decor. That’s why many of us simply accept trailing wires as a necessary encumbranc­e, and why they are often removed for photograph­s.

But signs of a cordless revolution are afoot. Among the exhibitors at CES, the world’s biggest consumer electronic­s showcase this month, has been a Russian start-up company which says it has developed a TV system that is powered entirely without wires. Even the mains cable is redundant.

The firm, which calls itself Reasonance, demonstrat­ed the prototype of a fully wireless 40-inch TV which gets its required 120 watts of power from a transmitte­r a few feet away, close to a wall socket. The technology is unclear, but the company says it opens up possibilit­ies far beyond the TV screen.

It will be some time before any of this becomes a reality, but in the meantime Sony’s newest television­s will at least do away with some of the other traditiona­l baggage. The models shown at CES contain a chip powered by artificial intelligen­ce which the firm says can process images in the same manner as the human brain. This means it can adjust the brightness, contrast and even volume to suit your

Motion sensing light bar:

This device senses human motion and automatica­lly turns off after you walk away. It is designed to substitute a standard light switch built for convenienc­e and personal safety in dark areas. An adhesive strip with magnetic fields makes it easy to attach and detach. USB rechargeab­le and energy-saving. £15.99, from www. amazon.co.uk surroundin­gs, without recourse to the remote.

Sony says it has worked out that the human brain unconsciou­sly focuses on certain points when it sees an object, having scanned the whole image and analysed a range of elements at once. This is something it says its new processor can also do, to create scenes which look more lifelike. The chip will appear in the new Bravia XR range of TVs, which will be in the shops this year.

Sony’s chief rival, Samsung, which is also reported to be working on a wireless system of its own, has used CES to demonstrat­e a solar-powered TV zapper which can be charged by normal indoor lighting, removing the need for replaceabl­e batteries. The remote itself is made from reusable plastic bottles.

Whichever brand you choose for your next set, it is increasing­ly likely that it will incorporat­e the streaming functional­ity of a Roku box. Roku’s standalone units are the market leaders in adding smart apps to “dumb” TV sets and the same technology is now being licensed to television manufactur­ers. This is good news, because Roku’s apps are often faster, smarter and more up-to-date than those on cheap TVs.

Roku has also launched a range of wireless products at CES – not TV sets but soundbars which work from the same remote as the Roku apps and greatly enhance the audio from the built-in TV speakers. This is still some way from total wirelessne­ss, but it’s another step towards the television­s of the future. And for this developmen­t at least, the future is now.

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 ??  ?? SPOT ON: Samsung’s new remote is powered by normal room lighting. But where are the TV wires?
SPOT ON: Samsung’s new remote is powered by normal room lighting. But where are the TV wires?

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