I bought this during a gold box sale, paying under $500 including shipping. I was looking for a 1080P inexpensive 32 inch LCD for my bedroom, but the temporary price drop of this 40 inch TV had me biting the bullet. The TV itself has a decent picture, once adjustments to picture settings are made. Mine had 1 stuck pixel near the screen's left center edge, completely unnoticeable unless your face is a couple of inches away from the screen; I'll try massaging it out. The matte-finish screen doesn't attract a lot of reflection in my bright bedroom, which is a good thing, but there is some slight "flashlighting" from the backlight when the screen display is all black. There is some motion blur during fast-moving scenes, but not a deal breaker by any means, being a 60 Hz model.
I have this hooked up via HDMI to a HD-DVR Dish Network tuner and HD broadcasts in both 720P and 1080i look good. I also have an upscaling DVD player hooked up to it via HDMI and standard DVDs look great upscaled to 1080P. Menu settings are intuitive and simple to set, and the remote is average, but I'm still trying to figure out how to program my Dish Network remote to handle all the TV remote functions alone, as there isn't a lot of documentation on the Viore brand (re-badged Chinese LCD TVs.) I thought that I'd have to wall mount it and get rid of my bedroom AV armoire, since the specs list the length from laft to right at 44" and my armoire can handle a maximum width of 40", but the TV is actually 39.5", so it just fits.
The TV shipped via Ceva and was a couple of days late due to ice storms in Dallas, but they called me when it had arrived here in Denver, saying they could deliver it in the next 2 hours; the delivery guy actually arrived in 1.5 hours, brought it in and took it out of the box for me for inspection. He would have set it up as well, but I said I didn't need him to. The TV took me less than 10 minutes to place in the armoire, hook everything up and watch TV, then maybe 10 minutes or so to adjust picture settings to my liking.
As shipped, the TV's default settings display with not quite enough color saturation, contrast and sharpness, with a slight green cast to skin tones, but as I said, all easily remedied with a few settings changes. It has a default dynamic contrast/brightness setting labeled as "XVS enabled/disabled" that I turned off, as it tended to bother me as the whole screen would brighten/darken too much as the camera angles in the broadcast would change. Sound is average for an LCD TV without the soundbar, having 2 x 8 Watt built-in speakers, but the soundbar makes for a big improvement when turned on. It has a sleep timer, parental lock settings, several pre-set sound and picture profiles (Movies/Sports/Standard/Dynamic/Music, etc.) and allows the menu languages to be displayed in English, French, Spanish and German. It has 4 noise-reduction pre-sets and allows you to show/hide channels and label channels to your liking. I don't currently have a PC hooked up, but you can hook it up via VGA or HDMI.
Overall, I'm very pleased with my purchase; we'll see how the longevity factor weighs in down the road, as I've only had the set for a few days.