It's right before CES, and I'm inundated with press releases. Bell'O sent over a preview of their 2005 lineup, and I noticed something that struck a nerve: like all furniture vendors, they claim that their stands are ideal for hot selling rear projection TVs using digital technologies (DLP, LCD, and LCOS). They even go so far as to list a few specific models such as Sony's 60" Grand WEGA LCD TV. Except that the stand doesn't match the TV's depth. None of them do. All the stands are at least 19" deep, and most are 21" - 24", while the new TVs range from 6.75" deep for new DLP sets from RCA and InFocus to 14 - 17" deep sets from nearly everyone else.
This isn't unique to Bell'O - when I went to buy a stand for my shiny new LCOS-based HDTV I couldn't find any stands that were the right depth (I ended up making a short term compromise and just getting something super-cheap at IKEA, but that stand will eventually be replaced).
Consumers are willing to spend more money on shallow non-CRT HDTVs precisely because they don't stick out and dominate the room as much. Why would they want furniture that negates the shallow depth they paid extra for?
-avi
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