Spending a little to fix a problem, beats spending a lot to get

You have bought a high end, brand new, flat panel, HD, very expensive television set for you and your family to watch and play games on. However, now that you have it home and are enjoying it so much, you tend to fall asleep with your favorite movie menu playing. When you wake up the next morning, the picture has burn in and you have to watch the news with an overlay of the menu from the movie you watched the night previous. You awake confused and wondering how to fix it. You have heard about image retention from friends, but never thought it could happen to you.

Stuck pixels are another way your television can turn against you. Having lines run through the picture, or even just one or two of the tiniest little squares be an odd color can ruin the experience you were going for when you purchased the big screen. You may think it is a lost cause and be looking to trade in your new TV with an even newer model, but spending hundreds, if not thousands, should not be the most desirable or first option. There are many options that you can try, but be aware of the scams like screen repair DVDs or websites that have you download anything. While a very small margin of these have proven to have a very small success rate, spending the exorbitant amount to cross your fingers and hope you are one of the lucky ones is just not worth it.

Trying a newly patent pending technology may sound like a scary thing, but without invention, where would we be? We wouldn’t have the wheel, or coffee, or even the television that you are trying to figure out how to help work better and without picture imaging issues. With a pixel fixer, all you have to do is plug it in 20 minutes every week and watch your television get better. Consider it an antibiotic for the illness your appliance is suffering from. Your doctor cannot prescribe a “get better immediately” pill, but gives you something to take a couple of times a day and you should see results in about a week. But, we are impatient with our “toys”. We want them to work or be replaced instantly. But, after you use the patent pending technology of pixel fixing for a short while, you must continue as maintenance to insure your appliance does not break down again. Twenty minutes once a week is nothing compared to the cost of purchasing a completely new television unit.

When you have an issue with your TV, try researching the newest knowledge and technology before trying something you find in your local mall or on a late night infomercial that may end up making your television worse, or at best, make no difference at all. You may end up spending a bit more money, but in the long run you will find something that works. Putting in the effort to investigate a fix that will actually work will be well worth the money you are saving not trashing your existing television and purchasing a new unit.

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