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That's Computainment! Dallas TX

There was a time when electronics knew their place. The television nestled happily in the living room or bedroom, the computer resided complacently in the home office or den, and the only thing digital in the kitchen was the coffeemaker's built-in timer. As convergence brings PCs and TVs together, will the future go boom or bust?

Dallas Neighborhoods

This page also contains providers and other information for the following Dallas neighborhoods: Addison, Greenville, Oak Cliff, Richardson, Deep Ellum and covering the following zip codes: 75001, 75401, 75208, 75080, 75226

Northern Computer Systems
(469) 576-0707
1035 Levee St
Dallas, TX
Essex Corporation
(214) 691-0063
5956 Sherry Lane
Dallas, TX
Electrical Surplus of Texas
(972) 579-5552
822 E Shady Grove Road
Irving, TX
EMI
(214) 798-2288
4244 Spring Valley Road
Dallas, TX
Barajas Electronics
(214) 549-6729
150 West Kingsley Ave.
Garland, TX
Samuth Associates Inc
(214) 421-3020
1402 Corinth Street Suite 136
Dallas, TX
Electronic Solutions
(214) 341-7055
10610 Metric Drive
Dallas, TX
Xerox
(972) 239-9555
4490 Alpha Road Suite 200
Dallas, TX
Circuit King
(214) 962-4576
1208 Northwest Highway
Garland, TX
Bell and McCoy
(469) 574-0300
1132 Valwood Parkway%2C Suite 100
Carrollton, TX
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That's Computainment!

Posted by : Elizabeth Millard

There was a time when electronics knew their place. The television nestled happily in the living room or bedroom, the computer resided complacently in the home office or den, and the only thing digital in the kitchen was the coffeemaker's built-in timer. Now, PC makers and entertainment purveyors have a new message: There's really no difference between a high-end computer and a tricked-out home theater system; so why not mix and match?

Computer users have long added entertainment functions to their PCs. Of course, PCs make a great music hub for CD mixing and MP3 downloads. The PC is the primary photo fixing, sending, and storing device. Newer models also play DVDs with digital pictures. And there are several tuner cards on the market that let users watch TV and listen to the radio.

It's really not that hard to bring digital entertainment to your den or home office. The trickier part is bringing computing into your living-room entertainment center.

Major manufacturers and retailers have strengthened their push to bring digital entertainment into the living room's analog environment in the last few years. As consumers get more comfortable burning CDs, using personal video recorders (PVRs), and e-mailing digital photos of the kids to Grandma, companies from both entertainment and computing universes are ushering them even further into the digital realm with hardware like the HP Media Center PC and software like Apple's iLife.

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