Sharp To Americans: You Don't Want to Buy a Sharp-Brand TV (wsj.com)
Sharp has sued China's Hisense Electric, which licensed the Sharp brand for televisions sold in the U.S., accusing Hisense of putting the Sharp name on poor-quality TVs and deceptively advertising them (alternative source). From a report: The court action is the latest effort by Osaka-based Sharp to retrieve the right to use its own name when selling TVs in one of the world's largest markets. Sharp is trying to recover its position as a global maker of consumer electronics. Hisense rejected the allegations and said it was selling high-quality televisions under the Sharp name. The dispute illustrates the risks when the owner of a well-known brand name gives up control over products sold under that name.
Maybe if they didn't want their brand to take a substantial hit, they shouldn't have licensed it out.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
Modern app appers only use App® brand apps, NOT LUDDITE Sharp!
Apps!
Back in the day they put out the best LCD panels period, but sometime in the early 2000s they lost their way and faded from the top end entirely.
I read the internet for the articles.
I have 2 Hisense TVs (Hisense branded, not Sharp branded). My Smart TV that I purchased failed (the LED backlight stopped working), and they replaced it with a brand new much better model with no issue under warranty when it was almost 2 years old. The replacement was made in Mexico, not China, even. Hisense USA is based in Atlanta (Suwanee GA), not China, though their parent company is Chinese.
It sure did pay the bills back in the '80s when I worked in TV/VCR repair. The TV sets regularly caught fire when the flyback transformers carbonized (prompting a class action lawsuit and a huge settlement), and their VCRs were a constant source of mechanical issues, far worse than most of the competition.
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and I'm not giving my money to Rupert Murdoch.
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Delendae sunt RIAA, MPAA et Windoze
Horse puckey. Sharp had a number of quite nice products over the years which were ahead of their time. If you ever had one of those TRS-80 pocket computers, you were running a Sharp device and didn't even know it due to the cross branding.
You sold the rights to your name to make a quick buck, now stop whining when someone uses it in a way you don't like. If you wanted your name only to be associated with good (ok, reasonable) quality gear you should have kept it in house.
That's debatable. I have a 40" HiSense TV at home which i paid US$220 for and i have zero complaints about its quality. The panel itself looks the same, if not better than any Sharp 40" offering at about twice the price.
Anyway, didn't Sharp licence its brand name to HiSense?
In the US market a licensor must have a measure of control over the products produced under license. If Sharp failed to include that then it is deemed a naked license and Hisense should be able to apply for revocation of the Shap trademark for TVs.
Outsourcing gives you unpredictable quality? Gee, who wouldda thought!
Table-ized A.I.
I didn't know Sharp still made televisions.
There have been times recently when it is rather difficult to find a good tv from a mainstream manufacturer that didn't spy on you and make you pay for the privilege.
Sharp was a top tier brand -- Sony and Sharp co-funded an LCD panel factory, and Sony TV's used Sharp's LCD panels. (The whole reason Sony was involved in the factory is because they wanted Sharp's LCD panels).
The problem is that Sharp happened to buy the factory just before the housing crisis -- and the market for new TV's vanished overnight. If you took any time to look outside the world of the PlayStation, you'd see that Sony had some serious problems selling their TV & home theatre products during the same period.
With nobody buying, Sharp was unable to sell their own TV's, or LCD panels to Sony. State-sponsored/funded Chinese companies swooped in as the market was picking up again, and Sharp wasn't able to recover.
So yeah... Sharp was unlucky in its timing of building a factory, and the PRC's government decided it was in their interest to spend government money to bankrupt a foreign company. Nothing new about either of those things.
-- Sometimes you have to turn the lights off in order to see.
TV and movies is entertainment for dump, primitive people
Actually, it's "hara-kiri."
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Delendae sunt RIAA, MPAA et Windoze
But is that a problem with the retailer, or with the manufacturer? Your TV was likely bought from Sharp directly.
I tried making a witty Japanese response, but slashdot kills my unicode. What could possibly be the matter? Surely Slashdot supports unicode?
Slashdot to unicode wa ketsugo shimasen
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
I had a Sharp calculator in high school, avoiding the whole HP vs TI gang wars. I liked it very much. Kept me going in high school, college, work, and was even in use in grad school after that. Doesn't work now, but it's the early generation LCD display that is busted.
I've used Sharp products in the past and they were decent not great products. I had a TV that lasted 10+ years and only got rid of it because I switched to a wide screen flat panel. I have noticed that the products within the last decade have seemed to be poorly made.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
Can't remember when Sharp had a reputation worth defending but it wasn't this century! Here in the UK HiSense is now a more respected brand than most Japanese brands that went down the licencing cheap foreign factory built crap route long, long ago.
I think licensing or selling of trademarks should be illegal altogether.
The whole point of trademark law was not to create some kind of "intellectual property" that the holder could license or sell, or be sold off as an asset in a bankruptcy sale.
The point of it was to protect consumers. So that when you bought a bottle of "Bass Pale Ale" (one of the oldest trademarks in the world), you could be reasonably sure it was made by the right people, and not some cheap knock-off. Consumer protection.
When trademarks can be bought, sold and licensed, consumer protection goes out the window. Who makes that "Honeywell" humidifier? Not Honeywell, that's for sure.
When a company goes out of business, it's trademarks should die with it. Anything else is a deceit, intended to scam the consumer.
And my TV is an even lower brand called Changhong. It's was the cheapest set I could get with three HDMI and 40" of screen, and it's been fine. Knock on wood.
$200 at Walmart -an experience that forever killed me on using WalmartDOTcom for anything again, but that has nothing to do with the TV.
It seems Changhong is mostly sold by Newegg now, also a Chinese-owned company.
Interestingly, the TV I got shares the same IR remote control codes as my older Toshiba TV, which was made before Toshiba sold the rights. Just curious.
Sig for hire.
Sony had their premier line of equipment that they sold from specialty stores or mom and pop shops that dealt in quality, not quantity. They were sold next to SHARP, Toshiba, LG and Samsung.
Samsung associated with quality? Guffaw. Sure, they make shiny black boxes, but the quality of their implementations are very low.
Samsung PVRs, for example, throw "Invalid format" errors all over the place when trying to play streams over DLNA but then you put those same streams onto a USB hard disk or key and it'll play them quite happily. Even when it does play streams over DLNA it doesn't pay attention to aspect ratio and always shows them at 16:9. Play the same streams from a USB hard disk or key and it will magically display them in the correct aspect ratio. Kind of defeats the purpose of supporting DLNA when its not even good enough to be called half-assed.
Best Buy has a house brand "Toshiba". built cheap, forget anything you may have associated with Toshiba, like that laptop that lasted six years.....Tossed it out, replaced with a Samsung which at least had accurate skin tones.
Score: 5, Funny.
(Was going to say "you must be new here," but a low-6-digit uid isn't all that new anymore.)
20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
If you ever had one of those TRS-80 pocket computers, you were running a Sharp device and didn't even know it due to the cross branding.
Depends- some were apparently made by Sharp, others by Casio.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
I tried making a witty Japanese response, but slashdot kills my unicode.
I'd have said you should try Slashdot Japan instead, but it's no longer known by that name. (#)
Never mind, they've got a fantastic story on "How did the boob disappear from the terrestrial TV in Japan" which informs us that
According to the article, the boobs gradually began to be purged from the golden time since 2000, and the last "tits" in the terrestrial wave of Tokyo was seen on TV Asahi of January 7, 2012
Good to know, I'd been wondering that myself.
(#) Apparently it's still owned by OSDN, which sold the main Slashdot site several years ago- maybe they no longer have the rights to the name?
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
Alas my Japanese is not that good. I'm still learning basic grammar, trying to get to grips with Kanji and my vocabulary is limited.
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
Your TV was likely bought from Sharp directly.
On the contrary, I suspect it's unlikely that Sharp would require the licensee to conduct all business (including distribution) through themselves; I doubt either party would find that workable.
I suppose it's possible in some cases that a licensee might have a legal subsidiary with (e.g.) "Sharp" in its name, but I'm pretty sure the stores know who they're buying from anyway, and that doesn't appear to be the case here:-
The fine print on the back of a document no one will read explains it is not a Sharp TV.
Guessing it says something like "'Sharp' trademark used under license by Cheap Generic OEM Telly Distributors of Butt***k, Illinois."
Of course, some might argue that's irrelevant anyway; Sharp, by licensing their name, have given their blessing to what's being done with it, whether the customers like that or not.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
Er... you're better than me then. I've forgotten even the negligible amount of Japanese I ever learned, and I use Google Translate. :-/
(Given how mangled two-way translations to and from Japanese are, though, I wouldn't risk it for anything important!)
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).