I get the impression that "Smart TV" has largely, to this point been treated as an incidental add-on, not a selling point. If buyers care primarily about price, which it seems they do [1] the half-assed features make a certain kind of sense. Add bare-minimum functionality while keeping prices down above all else.
If/when "smart" becomes an essential feature, I'd expect the experience to improve.
While an unresponsive UI and slow boot surely grates on many of us, I'd wager the average consumer doesn't notice/care. The millions of crappy Motorola cable boxes set the expectation and they're are at least as bad in all respects.
Personally, my TVs all get their smarts from a Roku 2/3.
People care, they are just too lazy to do any research or return crappy products to the store. They just pay their money, hate the product, and be miserable, and forget the whole thing next time they buy from the ad or the salesperson at the store.
If/when "smart" becomes an essential feature, I'd expect the experience to improve.
While an unresponsive UI and slow boot surely grates on many of us, I'd wager the average consumer doesn't notice/care. The millions of crappy Motorola cable boxes set the expectation and they're are at least as bad in all respects.
Personally, my TVs all get their smarts from a Roku 2/3.
1: http://gigaom.com/2013/03/06/survey-says-people-start-caring...