The 3840×2160 resolution supplies four times the pixel density of standard 1080p displays which becomes evident when watching nature documentaries or sports where fine details make all the difference. Textures in clothes are finer, individual blades of grass on football fields are more distinguishable, and facial features during close-ups are sharper. The upscaling engine takes your existing HD content from cable boxes or Blu-ray players and upscales it to near-4K quality, filling in missing information via intelligent processing.
The specs tell the real story here: This isn't some stripped-down basic display masquerading as a smart TV. You're looking at full 1080p resolution on a 32-inch LED screen, which means movies and shows can appear crisp and detailed. The LED backlighting provides consistent color reproduction and solid contrast levels; those darker scenes don't just dissolve into murky messes. At a 60Hz refresh rate, motion stays smooth for any sports or action sequences.
Hisense is one of those brands that is hands down the best option for your depending on your priorities. This isn't some expensive OLED TV which can go for multiple thousands of dollars. You can still get a picture that big, displays and 4K, and has a wide color gamut without taking out a second mortgage on your house. This 4K 43-inch TV has support for Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos which can enhance your image quality and sound even further.
Alexa Plus is coming to a bunch of Amazon's new and current Fire TV hardware. Just like before, you can summon the new, improved version of Alexa with your voice, but it's designed to be much more helpful and better at fetching context-sensitive information about things happening onscreen that you might normally reach for your phone to find. The company shared some ways in which Alexa Plus supercharges its X-Ray feature that tells you more about the content you're watching on Prime Video.