All televisions produced since 2006 are "cable ready". In fact, rabbit ears are now obsolete.
It will have a HDMI or a component connectors.
A cable converter is used with TVs that are not cable ready so that they can actually display cable channels. The price of a cable converter averages about $70.00.
A cable converter is used with TVs that are not cable ready so that they can actually display cable channels. The price of a cable converter averages about $70.00.
A cable converter is used with TVs that are not cable ready so that they can actually display cable channels. The price of a cable converter averages about $70.00.
does someone pay you to post stoopid questions, here. answer to question: the term cable-ready is a metaphor. technically, a device is cable-ready if it has co-axial connectivity, HOWEVER, where tv access is via cable, a cable BOX will Always be REQUIRED. type tv is not an issue.
No, but it is prepared for it. It does require (I believe) a component cable-ready tv, and is ready for HDMI if your TV is
Yes. The Direct TV hookup is the box alone, from the box can come a cable, HDMI and even Composite outputs.
Yes. but you still have to make sure they have some kind of tuner after february 2009 in the US
HD ready tv is High Definition - meaning more clear, concise and crisp picture as well as sound. There is special programming through your cable for this if you have a High Definition television.
yes it is just like any other t.v
The size doesn't change anything. Its how you connect the console to the TV. You will have a standard VGA connect, HD cable or HDMI cable. Your TV will provide you with ether a VGA cable (none HD tv) or a HD/HDMI cable (HD ready or Full HD 1080p)
Many earlier "Cable Ready" TVs are that way. Only the newer and more expensive sets had the 3 line audio/ video connectors