Ditch Smart TVs: Best Dumb TV Options | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Sick of smart TVs? Here are your best options

You’re not alone. If the idea of a TV that spies on your viewing habits, nags you with ads, or slows to a crawl after a few years sounds terrible, welcome to the club. Smart TVs are brilliant when they work, but they also bundle an always-on computer — complete with telemetry, bloatware, and vendor lock-in — right into your living room. The good news: you don’t have to live with it. Here’s a friendly, practical guide to escaping the smart-TV treadmill without sacrificing picture quality.

Why “dumb” TVs are suddenly a thing again

Over the last decade, manufacturers jammed internet-capable software into every screen. That convenience came with trade-offs:

  • Privacy concerns from telemetry, voice assistants, and ad targeting.
  • Software that ages faster than the hardware — manufacturers often stop updating TV OSes after a few years.
  • Preinstalled apps, ads, and sluggish interfaces that degrade the experience.
  • Repair and longevity problems when a TV’s software becomes a liability.

Ars Technica recently put this tension into sharp focus and asked a simple question: how can you get a great display without the smart-TV strings attached? The answers fall into a few practical categories — each with pros and cons depending on your budget, technical comfort, and tolerance for tinkering. (arstechnica.com)

Choices that work (and what to expect)

1. Buy a genuinely non-smart TV (yes, they still exist)

  • What it is: A basic television that lacks an internet-capable OS.
  • Pros: No telemetry, no ads, simpler UI, sometimes cheaper.
  • Cons: Fewer models available; often lower-tier panels or fewer modern features (HDR, HDMI 2.1) at the same price points.
  • Who this fits: Minimalists, people who watch via antenna/cable or dedicated devices and want a no-friction display.

2. Buy a smart TV and never connect it to the internet

  • What it is: A modern TV with excellent panel tech whose network functions you never enable.
  • Pros: Access to high-quality displays (brightness, color, HDR, HDMI 2.1), longevity of hardware, and you can still use external devices for streaming.
  • Cons: Some TVs force-sign-in screens or firmware checks on boot; internal apps remain dormant but present.
  • Practical tip: Disable Wi‑Fi, don’t plug an Ethernet cable in, and set up your streaming box, game console, or antenna to handle content. Many reviewers say this gives the best balance of picture tech and privacy. (howtogeek.com)

3. Buy a smart TV but strip or lock down its software

  • What it is: Use privacy settings, remove (or hide) accounts, block telemetry, or use router-level DNS/firewall blocks for tracking domains.
  • Pros: Keeps built-in features if you occasionally want them; maintains a single remote experience.
  • Cons: Not foolproof — firmware updates can re-enable things, and it takes technical know-how to manage network-level blocks.
  • Who this fits: Tech-savvy buyers who want the convenience but refuse to be tracked.

4. Use an external streaming box or stick (Roku, Apple TV, Fire TV, Chromecast)

  • What it is: Pair any display with a small, replaceable streaming device.
  • Pros: External devices are updated more regularly, are easier to replace, and centralize streaming under platforms you control. Swap them when they age or you don’t like them.
  • Cons: More boxes/remotes to manage; the external device vendor may still have tracking (so pick one whose privacy stance you like).
  • Note: This is the most future-proof approach — upgrade the streamer, not the display. (arstechnica.com)

5. Consider projectors, computer monitors, or commercial signage

  • What it is: Alternatives that can function as TV displays without consumer smart features.
  • Projectors:
    • Pros: Huge screen for the price; many models remain “dumb.”
    • Cons: Require dark rooms, careful placement, and usually external audio.
  • Computer monitors:
    • Pros: Great pixel density, low latency for gaming.
    • Cons: Cheaper 4K monitors often lack TV features (tuner, speakers).
  • Digital signage displays:
    • Pros: Built for long uptime and durability.
    • Cons: More expensive and sometimes not optimized for home viewing.
  • Who this fits: Home theater enthusiasts, gamers, or anyone willing to accept trade-offs for a non-smart display. (arstechnica.com)

Shopping tips — what to look for when you want a dumb experience

  • Prioritize the panel: contrast ratio, peak brightness (for HDR), color gamut, and refresh rate (for gaming).
  • Count HDMI ports and check HDMI version (HDMI 2.1 matters for modern consoles).
  • If you buy new, read the manual or spec sheet to confirm whether Wi‑Fi or smart features can be completely disabled.
  • Consider warranty and supported hours (especially for signage displays or commercial panels).
  • If buying used, local classifieds or refurb sellers can be gold mines — but test the unit and ask about network features.

Privacy and network-level tricks to keep smart features quiet

  • Put the TV on its own VLAN or guest network and block outbound connections you don’t want (router-level DNS filtering or Pi-hole).
  • Disable automatic firmware updates unless you need a patch.
  • Avoid signing into vendor accounts on the TV; use an external device for services and log in there.
  • Regularly audit permissions for voice assistants or external microphones/cameras.

Alternatives and trade-offs summarized

  • Best for ease: Smart TV kept offline or with an external streamer.
  • Best for minimalism: New non-smart TV (if you can find a good one).
  • Best for picture tech: Modern smart TV used as if it were dumb (disable networking).
  • Best for scale: Projector + external streamer for big-screen enthusiasts.
  • Best for longevity: Commercial signage displays for durability, but watch energy/noise and cost.

What reviewers and testing labs say

Writers and reviewers agree that the simplest, most future-proof choice is to decouple software from hardware: buy the best display you can afford and route streaming through a separate, replaceable device. That way, you update the part that ages fastest (the software/streamer) without tossing the whole screen. Tom’s Guide, How-To Geek, and other outlets echo that trade-off between display quality and embedded software, and Ars Technica’s recent guide lays out the practical options for avoiding smart-TV pitfalls. (tomsguide.com)

What many folks forget: a cheap workaround is often the most durable. Want Netflix and none of the spying? Plug in a streaming stick and never connect the TV itself to the internet.

A few recommended scenarios

  • You want the best picture and low effort: buy a modern TV, keep its network off, and plug in a Roku/Apple TV/Chromecast.
  • You want a pure, simple display: hunt for a non-smart TV model or a refurbished commercial panel.
  • You want a cinematic, big-screen feel: consider a projector with an external streamer and a soundbar.
  • You’re privacy-focused and comfy with networking: block the TV’s telemetry at the router level.

Quick checklist before you buy

  • Does the TV allow disabling Wi‑Fi/Ethernet in settings?
  • Are firmware updates optional or forced?
  • How many HDMI ports and what version?
  • Does the TV have a microphone/camera that can’t be physically disabled?
  • If used, can you test network features before committing?

Parting thoughts

My take: “Dumb” TVs aren’t just nostalgia — they’re a sensible reaction to an ecosystem that too often prioritizes ads and data over user experience. The cleanest, most sustainable path for most people is to buy the best display you can and separate the software with a dedicated streamer. That gives you high-quality picture tech, the ability to swap streaming platforms as they evolve, and a lot more control over privacy without sacrificing convenience.

If you’re truly allergic to anything smart, used markets and budget non-smart models still exist — but be ready to trade some modern features for that peace of mind. Ultimately, the smart move is to choose the approach that keeps upgrades modular: replace the brains, not the TV.

Useful takeaways

  • Keeping a TV offline and using an external streamer is the most practical way to avoid smart-TV tracking without sacrificing modern display tech.
  • Pure non-smart TVs are rare but still available; consider them if you want zero network features.
  • Projectors, monitors, and commercial panels are valid alternatives with unique trade-offs.
  • Network-level blocking and privacy hygiene can significantly reduce telemetry even if you keep smart features available.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Has Apple Launched Products in November | Analysis by Brian Moineau

When was the last time Apple launched new products in November? A quick history as we wait for Apple TV, AirTag, and more

Apple fans have gotten very used to a cadence: big iPhone and Apple Watch news in September, occasional Mac and iPad moments in October, and then the company fades into a quieter holiday rhythm. So when rumors start swirling in late October about a new Apple TV, a HomePod mini 2, or AirTag 2, the question naturally follows — how often does Apple actually drop new hardware in November?

Below I walk through the recent history, call out the most notable late‑year launches, and offer a perspective on whether November 2025 could really be the month Apple surprises us again.

Why November feels surprising

  • Apple’s publicity machine is built around big, planned events. September has been the home for flagship iPhone launches for years, and October has been the fallback for Macs, iPads, and some Apple Services reveals.
  • November is often a shipping or retail month — announced products that trickle into stores, rather than brand‑new unveilings. That makes a fresh product announcement in November feel like a break from the pattern.
  • Still, Apple has used late‑year timing when it mattered: supply chains, software readiness, or pandemic delays have all shifted release calendars before.

Recent late‑year Apple product launches

  • November 10, 2020 — Apple unveiled the first M1 Macs (MacBook Air, 13‑inch MacBook Pro, Mac mini). That was a major architectural shift and one of Apple’s most consequential late‑year announcements in recent memory. (9to5mac.com)
  • December 2020 — AirPods Max were introduced via a press release in December 2020 (announced later in the year rather than at a major event). This illustrates Apple sometimes prefers quiet, non‑event rollouts late in the year. (9to5mac.com)
  • November 13, 2019 — Apple released the 16‑inch MacBook Pro in mid‑November, another example of a significant product arriving outside the usual September/October window. (9to5mac.com)
  • Other late releases have included products that were announced earlier and shipped in November or December (for example, the M4 Macs shipped in November after an October announcement). That pattern makes November a shipping month more than an unveiling month most years. (9to5mac.com)

What the rumors say for November 2025

  • Multiple outlets (including 9to5Mac, MacRumors, and coverage of Mark Gurman’s reporting) suggest Apple could be preparing new hardware in November 2025: a refreshed Apple TV 4K with a faster chip (reportedly A17 Pro), a second‑generation HomePod mini, and possibly AirTag 2 with improved Ultra Wideband and security features. These are described as likely “coming soon” or “in the coming months,” and several reports point to mid‑November retail refresh activity around November 11, 2025. (9to5mac.com)
  • Retail overnight store refreshes (an internal Apple practice ahead of product rollouts or merch changes) are often a hint but not definitive proof of a product launch. Apple has used this approach for both product introductions and seasonal store updates. (macrumors.com)

What history suggests about the chances of a November unveiling

  • Uncommon but not unprecedented: Major, headline‑making November launches are rare (2020 and 2019 stand out), but November product introductions do happen, especially when timing or logistics push Apple off its usual calendar. (9to5mac.com)
  • Apple’s habits favor September/October announcements, then November as a month to ship announced products or refresh retail displays. If Apple does announce an Apple TV, HomePod mini 2, or AirTag 2 in November 2025, it will be notable only because it bucks that trend — but the trend is not a rule.
  • Leaks and supply signals matter: limited availability of current models and internal retail plans increase the odds that something is imminent. Still, leaks can be wrong or refer only to shipping schedules rather than announcement events. (macrumors.com)

What to watch this November

  • November 11, 2025 — multiple reports flagged this date as a likely overnight store refresh. Keep an eye on Apple Store pages and press releases around that date. (macrumors.com)
  • Software release cadence — Apple often aligns hardware availability with software updates. The iOS/tvOS/wide system updates expected in early November could be paired with hardware availability or new product support notes. (9to5mac.com)
  • Short, quiet press releases — not every Apple product gets a keynote. AirPods Max and a few other products launched via press release or small announcements late in the year. Watch Apple’s Newsroom for those. (apple.com)

What this means for buyers and fans

  • If you want the rumored Apple TV 4K or AirTag 2, be ready for two possibilities:
    1. A quick, quiet Apple announcement (press release and product page) in November with immediate preorders or shipments.
    2. A short announcement that the product will ship later (December or early 2026), which is Apple’s typical holiday logistics play.
  • Holiday shopping windows could push Apple to time product availability for November even if the formal unveiling happened earlier — that’s why stock and shipping updates can be as telling as announcements.

Notable dates to remember

  • November 10, 2020 — M1 Macs unveiled. (9to5mac.com)
  • November 13, 2019 — 16‑inch MacBook Pro announced/arrived. (9to5mac.com)
  • November 11, 2025 — rumored retail refresh date many outlets flagged as a possible product timing hint. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)

Quick takeaways

  • Apple launching hardware in November is uncommon but has happened in recent years (notably 2020 and 2019). (9to5mac.com)
  • November is more often a shipping or retail refresh month than a debut month, but supply cues and internal retail scheduling can presage real product drops. (9to5mac.com)
  • For November 2025 there are credible signals (rumors, retail refresh plans, and supply scarcity) that Apple could introduce or make available Apple TV 4K, HomePod mini 2, and AirTag 2 — but nothing is confirmed until Apple’s Newsroom or product pages change. (9to5mac.com)

Final thoughts

Apple doesn’t have to follow a calendar — and sometimes the company’s most interesting moves arrive when we least expect them. Historically, November announcements are rarer, but when they happen they’re often meaningful (we’re still feeling the impact of the M1 Macs announced on November 10, 2020). Keep an eye on Apple’s official channels and the November 11 retail timing that reporters are watching. Whether Apple surprises us with a shiny new Apple TV or quietly drops updated AirTags, the end of the year is a great time to revisit how Apple times product launches for market, shipping, and holiday reasons.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.