Sitting nonchalantly in front of Sony’s booth at the LVCC-so understated and stylish that you simply might walk right by it thinking it was just a slab of polished black glass-is essentially the most beautiful television I actually have ever seen.
The only clue that this featureless monolith even is a TV is the test pattern that pops on the screen on occasion: an assortment of gleaming white rectangles that hint at an LED array below the mirrored surface. There are not any buttons, no logos, no lights or switches or ports or maybe off-colored patches to provide this thing’s functions away.
In fact there are only two clues about what this thing is: 1) It’s sitting at the front of a row of similarly design-focused HDTVs, and a couple of) It’s at Sony’s booth. I’m gonna go out on a limb and say that this too is a Sony HDTV. I’m gonna go out on another limb and pray that Sony produces this thing-because I’d be awful tempted to buy it and stare at it all day. I wouldn’t even pollute the gorgeous screen with the crap I watch.
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