In a world of designer clothes, designer shoes, designer handbags and designer watches, be prepared to welcome a new addition: designer flat-screen TVs. Oh yes, this is no joke. It’s Sony who has come up with this rather unique idea. Their design TV range is all exclusive with TVs that are specially designed to be easy on the eyes and hog the limelight in your living room. Once such TV from the design TV range is the Sony Bravia KDL-32E5510 32” LCD TV. It is needless to say that the TV looks good. But to give you a better idea of how good this TV looks, I must say this: I’m definitely not easy to please when it comes to looks and this LCD TV pleased me down right.
It’s astonishingly slim and looks very much like a picture frame, which is what Sony intended with its ‘Picture frame’ design. You can also choose from black, aluminium and wood finishes to go with the décor of your living room. So does Sony compromise on the performance? No; at least not completely. Though there are a few problems with black levels and audio, the KDL-32E5510 makes up for them with the looks and the stunning clarity of pictures. The Picture Frame Mode is of course there, so you can use this piece of technology as a photo frame as well. A USB Media Player is also included, so you can transfer photos and videos from your Handycam or Cyber-shot and drool over them on the big screen.
The Sony Bravia KDL-32E5510 HD Ready LCD TV has a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels and a dynamic contrast ratio of 80000:1. The TV has Sony’s BRAVIA ENGINE which along with the MotionFlow 100Hz technology renders action scenes in their fullest glory. The 24p True Cinema feature is also sported, so you can plug in your Blu-Ray player in one of the 4 HDMIs and watch movies with superb clarity and sharpness in the format they were shot ( 24 frames per second). However, as said earlier, the brilliant video is not coupled with an equally brilliant audio. Voices lack depth and clarity, sounding scratched at times. But in the end, this beauty does end up impressing us.







