Excessive Spending: Guilty
I've gone off on the government for excessive spending and trade imbalance. Now I'm guilty of contributing.
Well, it's Christmas, dammit!
We finally replaced our 15-year-old TV with a new big screen digital light projection (DLP) monster. It is way too expensive for anything smaller than a pickup truck. In fact, now that I think about it, my first new car cost $500 less than this TV. Of course, that was 1968. My first house cost less than the pickup truck I bought two years ago. Of course, that was 1972. I still think that White Castles should be 10 for a buck.
I have a sore back from helping the truck driver get it into the house. But, surprisingly, this monster was pretty much plug and play.
We had so many choices that it only took about 9 months to finally decide. Naturally, none of the available choices were Made In USA. We settled on a futuristic looking set from Samsung, affectionally called the "Kirk" model by people who spend too much time on this stuff. Of course, now we have to get other things to work with the set. That's another matter.
Fortunately, I have three sons who are all experts in their own minds about anything technical. Well, they are pretty good at it... better than me, anyway. So, I'm going to let them figure out the S-Video and Componenet Video set-ups. Meanwhile, I did manage to get my 35-year-old, partially inoperative, speaker cabinets hooked up and working with it. Every once in awhile, the system controller goes into protect mode with those speakers shaking the wall. Then I shut down and restart the system and continue listening.
Now one of my sons and his girlfriend have pretty much taken over the TV. They assure me it's for a school project. So that gives me plenty of time to write this.
I guess that spread over 15 or 20 years the new TV isn't that big of an expense. It'll be obsolete by then... but so will I. Then I'll just go visit one of my sons and watch his whole-wall 3-D system or whatever technical magic he spends too much on.