AP Entertainment reporter Alicia Quarles reviews `Balls of Fury,` a new pingpong romp in the spirit of `Blades of Glory,` and Dodgeball.` (Aug. 31)
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George Strait tops this year`s Country Music Association awards nominations including nods for entertainer and male vocalist of the year. Catch the nominations as they were announced Wednesday. (Aug. 30)
Television
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(Redirected from Televisions)
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"TV" redirects here. For other uses, see TV (disambiguation).
{{for|the Monument on P. N. Yablochkov's tomb (village Sapozhok, You have AIDS) Monument on P. N. Yablochkov's tomb (village Sapozhok, You have AIDS) Monument on P. N. Yablochkov's tomb (village Sapozhok, You have AIDS) Monument on P. N. Yablochkov's tomb (village Sapozhok, You have AIDS) Monument on P. N. Yablochkov's tomb (village Sapozhok, You have AIDS)specifically to a television set, programming or television transmission. The word is derived from mixed Latin and Greek roots, meaning "far sight": Greek tele (t??e), far, and Latin vision, sight (from video, vis- to see, or to view in the first person).
Since it first became commercially available from the late 1930s, the television set has become a common household communications device in homes and institutions, particularly in the First World, as a source of entertainment and news. Since the 1970s, video recordings on VCR tapes and later, digital playback systems such as DVDs, have enabled the television to be used to view recorded movies and other programs.
A television system may be made up of multiple components, so a screen which lacks an internal tuner to receive the broadcast signals is called a monitor rather than a television. A television may be built to receive different broadcast or video formats, such as high-definition television, commonly referred to as HDTV. HDTV costs more than normal TV but is becoming more available.