There are many generic and name brand items that you can use as an HDTV console. You need to make sure that you measure your home to help yourself decide which one is right for you. Do not purchase a console that is too large, that will not fit in the space that you have available. At the same time, do not get one that is too small or it may not give the TV full support.
The decision to purchase a Sony or Panasonic HDTV is very personal but I personally own the Sony 42inch HDTV and it has been a great Television in our home.
The Speakers get connected to the TV that the console is connected to. So yeah you can purchase a home theater and connect it to your HDTV and when you play the PS3 if everything is connected correctly you will hear it through a number of speakers.
An HDTV LCD home theater projector can be found on amazon.com for as litle as 1,300.00. It would be hard to find it cheaper (and good quality) in the Los Angeles area.
There are plenty benefits of buying a brand new HDTV for your home. Firstly, they are better quality, light weight, and not very expensive. They are more common among households these days.
You don't. You either connect the PS3 to your HDTV with HDMI and the Comcast box to your HDTV with HDMI cables like I used to have or you connect the PS3 and Comcast Box with HDMI cables like I did to my home theater and then connect the home theater to the HDTV with a HDMI cable. My Comcast box is HD and I have a Sony HDTV and Sony Home Theater equipped with a HDMI repeater. If you are talking about connection for the internet it is not done with a HDMI cable, but an ethernet cable
Magnavox Odyssey was the first home video game console.
Most of the exteremely large HDTV's are those you see in sports stadiums, however home units can be as large as 150 inches! For more details online you can visit http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/10-largest-hdtv-displays.htm
No. DVDs only. But the PlayStation 3 can play Blu-Rays since you can only use an HDTV to view the console's displays
of course ps3 is so much better if you ever get a chance to buy it i would do it and rember the RED LIGHT on xbox sucks ANSWER: The graphics on the XBOX are slightly better. In fact, the difference is quite insignificant. And remember: graphics don't make a game. In fact the Graphics are a claim about a console that does not seem to realize what you use to show the Xbox 360 or PS3 on has way more to do with what your picture quality will be than either console. You spend $300 on the console and can spend $3000 on the HDTV and still not have the best picture possible from either of the consoles. Picture quality on 3D is even more critical to what 3D HDTV you are using on not which console. Basically what I am saying is that even if a computer has a great graphics card a poor monitor will diminish the results and that a console and HDTV are like a computer and monitor. Some people using a Xbox 360 with a standard TV foolishly think that graphics matter when there graphics are being downgraded to work on there TV
You should be able to plug the PS3 into the Home theater and plug that into the HDTV. If it is a new Slim PS3 then the HDMI sync should take over if turned on in the Home theater, HDTV, and PS3 and whenever you put a disc into the PS3 the system should be in sync to play your game or program through the HDTV and Home theater without you doing any manual changes and also go back to the previous setting when you turn the PS3 off.
The Samsung hdtv and the Sony hdtv are among the top quality televisions in the hdtv sector. The only difference between these televisions are the features they offer.
The first home video game console was the Magnavox Odyssey.