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I disagree with that actually.... buying a TV and it not working at all, that is faulty and requires either replacement or repair. Buying a TV and it not working as you thought, is your interpretation / expectation. Buying a TV that has a specification listed at point off sale, but doesn't exist when you get it home, is false advertising and grounds for immediate refund, by Australian consumer protection law.
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If I wanted to adjust some color settings on the TV but could not, I would consider that TV faulty.
Similarly, some people wanted to adjust image paths (or doctype, etc.) through stylevars but could not. It's the same to me.
However, the TV probably doesn't receive free upgrades from the manufacturer. I wouldn't demand a refund or anything for something like this, but the people who had such huge complaints should probably hold off on updating. Like another member posted, let the guinea pigs experience and/or fix the critical bugs first. Unfortunately I'm too trigger-happy on the "upgrading" too, so I'm a voluntary tester.
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