- Joined
- Jul 18, 2019
This is why I think the people who cope about Sony Japan putting SIE (aka the California people) 'back in their place' are delusional. This mentality is endemic in corporate Japan - the old stuff is not valuable, no one cares about legacy, be as shifty and litigious as you possibly can, etc.This was a pretty good watch. It also serves as a good analogy on the state of Sony; they couldn't even be arsed getting an easy PR win by accepting a interview on legacy technology. What a fall from grace.
I knew old Sony was truly dead when they killed their VAIO line.
It can't be helped. The golden age of CRT production is nearly 30 years in the past at this point. Even high-end electronics that are kept in reasonably good storage conditions are not going to last forever. High-quality tubes are only really rated for 30000 hours of use, which is ~3 years of continuous use and we're at a point where even sets that saw infrequent use are starting to bump into that. It's more than likely that most of the lower-quality tubes are already dead.But at the same time, I hate how "the retro community" are turning even run-of-the-mill CRTs into unobtainable gems, inflating their prices to ridiculous prices.
tl;dr yes there's grifting and gouging but I do legitimately think the supply is dwindling faster than a lot of people realize.
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