Thanks for posting. Still active, ordered one for pickup... debating if I actually want it, but $50 is pretty cheap.
Insignia sets are VERY difficult to get tech specs on.
I am quite certain the panel inside is not 720p in reality (1366x768 is more likely, though 1280x800 is possible given the physical dimensions)
I’m trying to find the panel # and manufacturer because a few 720p sets are sleeper sets that have a higher physical resolution inside making them more useful. (Aka for console gaming or video meetings)
One of my antique “720p” TVs actually had a strange 1600x900 resolution panel (the second tv I ever bought), my folks small 720p tv in the motorhome 19”? Was physically a 1440x900 resolution
It’s honestly perplexing that anything below FHD is still produced considering there is no cost savings for lower resolution panels, in fact small TVs historically always shared panels with monitors to save cost and would end up whatever strange commodity resolution was being used at the time.
heck some of the fake game boys with a 4” screen have a 1600x1440 resolution panel. (Though I guess I said that same thing in 2010 as useless 15,17 and 19” pc monitors kept being manufactured despite causing issues with menus not fitting on screen in then Current windows)
my very first so called 1080i big screen HD TV (at the time 32” was big) was only 1366x768 internally (false advertisement) and actually wouldn’t sync up to a progressive VGA signal above 1280x1024 and my pc at the time couldn’t output 16:9 resolutions so no idea if you could actually drive the full native panel resolution.
It was so old I think the best inputs were vga or component. (Might have had a dvi as well)
At that time I was using a PC for DVD and this made it irrating to try to send properly scaled content.