Wifi-Ready Television – Really ready or not?

 

 

Recent Australian news reported that,  Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has asked the Top 5 leading audiovisual manufacturers (Sony, LG, Panasonic, Samsung and Sharp) not to use the word “Wifi Ready” and “Wireless LAN Ready” when promoting their TVs. Instead, they will be accompanied by prominent statements such as ‘USB Wireless LAN adaptor required’, ‘WiFi Capable with Optional Adaptor’ or ‘Wireless LAN Adaptor required, sold separately’.

So, what is “Wifi Ready” ?  Back in good olden days, a product used to do exactly what is was advertised for. A read-write DVD player could read and write DVDs, no new hardware purchase was required. As Big Corporations felt the heat of competition and looked around for ways of smart marketing, the word “Ready” started cropping up in the advertisements. What this exactly means is, the device has a slot, and it can provide the required functionality once the middleman is purchased separately – which is usually costly adapter, dongle or proprietary hardware equipment.  End consumers tend to buy the devices which are “ready” instead of “built in” because it usually costs cheaper.

However,  when an unhappy Australian customer complained to ACCC because his TV gave him the message  “Wireless USB device not found. Insert a compatible wireless device into the TV’s USB port and try again” when he tried to switch on, ACCC did their own research and sided with the consumers. In our opinion, this is a very bold and necessary move.

Although the “ready”  tag will bring in sales for TV Companies, consumers will be left with no choice and will complain because the money they saved by comparing with built-in Wifi is spent on buying the adapters. Customer’s trust is a rare commodity, and it’s for the Companies’s benefits that they advertise exactly what the consumers will be getting.

We, at TheTechPanda also think that this is not the first marketing gimmick forced on the consumers. We’re used to seeing “HD ready” ,”Cable-ready”, “Digital-ready”, “HDTV-ready”, “Wifi-Ready” since some time now. So,why single out Wifi-ready? Better late than never, it would be a welcome move to replace all the “ready” with “Separate product required to make the feature work, sold separately”.

Also, rest of the world can take a leaf out of this, and think on making the consumer’s experiences better. Let us know what you think.

 

Saraswathi Pulluru

Telecom Consultant by Profession. Interested in Startups by Passion. Never tired to talk to and write about entrepreneurs, who are making the world a better place to live.

Recent Posts

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

7 hours ago

Finternet Labs & Avalanche collaborate to unlock $10B tokenization opportunity in India

Finternet Labs, a universal digital infrastructure announced a collaboration with Avalanche, the high-performance Layer-1 blockchain…

7 hours ago

When AI Sounds Too Human: The Verification Crisis No One Planned For

On January 16, the chief constable of West Midlands Police in the United Kingdom stepped…

19 hours ago

Skilling & upskilling: Digital Literacy, Gen AI, Workforce Development & Space

The Tech Panda takes a look at the efforts at skilling, upskilling, and reskilling in…

1 day ago

Outbound & inbound: Taking Indian drones flying to Germany & pharma receiving UK approvals while bringing in Dutch logistics, US Fintech & foreign grants

International trade has been in some upheaval with tariffs playing a significant role. For example,…

2 days ago

Geek Appeal: New gadgets & apps on the block

The Tech Panda takes a look at recently launched gadgets & apps in the market.…

3 days ago