When most people make a cruise, they treat their staterooms as a place to sleep, shower and clothes. However, for others, this can provide a haste in a hasty and noise.
For example, when trying to spend as little time as possible in Stateroom, sometimes my children need to take a bed. And sometimes you need to write one or two articles.
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Because most people do not spend much time in their rooms, cruise lines, do not excellent when it comes to rooms. Of course, there are sets that offer large screen TVs and improved sound systems.
However, in most carnival ships (especially the elderly), you can find a TV in about 20 channels to walk in the 24-inch toppark, and a TV on a number of presentations controlled by a cruise line.
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Should it update the fun in the carnival room?
Carnival Ambassador John Heald has a broad following Facebook page, which regularly responds to cruising questions. Recently received one of the TVs in the room. The question read:
“DH and I are on top of these small TVs, this small TV. A ship.”
Heald pointed out that in a standard stateroom, a few feet of TV. The joke was so close to the sites of the TV, and the carnival is so close to the bedrooms where the remote control could be rid of management.
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What do carnival cruisers think?
Heald, when you find an interesting question, Hundreds of thousands of viewers were “big enough in your last cruise?” Asked, he asked the issue that the issue was avoiding the weight.
Not surprisingly, most of the more than 1,000 response were along the lines of “I do not cruise to watch TV”.
Network watcher Gail Jankowski said: “It’s very big. I first use the bridge or bridge or to look at the bridge to see how we signed on or on the bridge or the bridge or the lido deck or see how the channel is going on or how the channel is going.”
I must admit that 90% of the time in the cabin is in one of these two channels. My 7-year-old son also often requires a “map channel”.
Elaine Bumpus, “In response to your question, the TV TV in the cabin is quite large. I don’t cruise to watch TV, but I’m cruise to open and enjoy.
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But all the cruisers did not agree.
“Well, I hate something, but yes, I hate the size of the TV! I hate the little ones,” Robin Holjes said. Merry Baumgarner, “I believe that TVs are very small. I don’t want a 70-inch screen, but they look like 24-inch screens and they should be completely large.”
Be sure, carnival is doing The larger ships have larger TVs (about 42 inches), but are not in most of the fleet. We do not have any information that any update is planned or even reviewed, but a lot of the cruisers are a bigger screen.
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