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The LG LA6200 series brings excellent looks and a robust feature set to the table, but spoils the meal with its less-than-robust picture quality.

Not to be outdone by curved OLED TVs, Sony proves good old LED LCD can also throw a curveball with this 65-incher, shipping this fall.

Plasma, LCD, OLED, or 4K? CNET's Brian Cooley breaks down the various screen technologies and offers advice on which TV you might want to buy.

The lone Panasonic LCD TV with 4K resolution, model TC-L65WT600, includes an input capable of handling faster frame rates than its competition. Its other issues, however, prevent it from earning our full recommendation, even to the few who want a 4K TV now.

Luke Westaway gets his hands on Sony's first 4K video camcorder, the FDR-AX100 at CES 2014.

The Samsung UNF5000 LED LCD is one of the company's few TVs to lack Smart TV features, but if you can stomach that lack, it represents a solid value.

Toshiba's basic, inexpensive L2300U series LED LCD seems appealing to budget shoppers on paper, but better values are available.

The good-looking Sony W802 television offers decent image quality for an LED but its color palette and high price pale in comparison to cheaper plasmas like the Panasonic ST60

The Vizio E-series offers deep blacks for a cheap LCD after a recent firmware update.

LG's LA8600 LED LCD delivers one of the best, most innovative Smart TV suites we've tested, but its picture quality isn't up to the level of its competitors.

The mainstream E series of LCD TVs by Vizio delivers decent picture quality, prolific Smart content and minimalist style.

The Panasonic DT60 is an attractive looking, well-featured LED LCD TV, but mediocre picture quality and worse value make it a tough sell.

If you want an LCD and you want it big, the natural solution for the last few years has been to choose a Sharp. It's still the only company with a 90-inch TV.

The Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 II adds a tilting LCD and hot shoe for accessories, but swaps in a 1-inch BSI sensor.

If you want the cheapest small TV with halfway-decent picture quality, look no further than the Toshiba 32C120U.

The LG CS560 is a cheap LCD TV but poor image quality amongst its peers means it's not a great deal.

The Panasonic E50 series is not a great example of an LCD television though it does offer a good number of features for the price.

At $100 or so cheaper than the Samsung E550, the Toshiba E220 is a solid performer and better than most TVs at the price.

With a 100-inch screen and a projector that sits just 22 inches from the screen, the HECTO is a unique take on big-screen TV.

The Vizio Co-Star is an affordable entry to the Google TV experience, but the software remains underwhelming and hampered by restrictions.

Shoppers for bargain-basement 32-inch LCD TVs can do better than the Panasonic TC-L32C5.

The Sony KDL-55HX850 is an excellent LCD television which features classic, understated design and deep black levels.


David Katzmaier checks out what LG claims is the world's largest LCD TV which is expected out in the third quarter of this year.

The Buzz Out Loud team gets together for a special episode to discuss and debate CNET's end-of-the-year CNET 100 list of lists. Are the winners really winners? Are we being fair to the disappointments? Will 3D TV ever get it right? Watch the show and join the discussion at http://cnet.com/cnet100

The overpriced Sharp Elite LED-based LCD produces the best overall picture quality of any TV we've reviewed since 2008.

The Samsung LND550's mix of features, style and picture quality stands tall among the tough entry-level LCD TV crowd.

The LG 55LV5500 is one of the poorer LCD entries from LG this year as it's afflicted by an uncontrollable backlight and isn't very competitive at its price point.

If you don't expect the world from the entry-level Sony KDL-BX420 LCD, its picture quality may be a pleasant surprise.

The hottest TV tech out there isn't 3D, it's LED. Here are the best LED LCD TVs according to CNET.