It has 1 S-Video, 3 Composite, and 2 component video. The picture quality is good, providing true blacks and full reds, blues, and greens. It does require some tweaking though, as the standard picture mode is very washed out. The speakers are decent, although, do not produce very good bass. You can adjust the equalizer, which is a very good idea.
The TV also supports picture tilting to remove incorrect image rotation. It does have fairly bad overscan not so much horizontally but vertically. The bottom of the image is cut off just enough to be noticable. Some people have problems with component video where the image will appear pinched in the center, making a trapazoid shape on both top and bottom. I havent noticed it but then again I'm not so anal about these things. Also, it has a freeze picture option, in case you want freeze the image for some reason.
Prices are fair considering it cost all of 100 dollars for me to find this set with a digital converter box. It really is a decent TV, especially if you have those wonderful PS2 and gamecube component cables. It requires a little work to get it where you want it, get it in a place that fits well as well as looks good, but for the price, its wonderful. Some of these sets are prone to huge amounts of geometry problems however, so before you shell out the cash, be sure to check the picture on all imputs to make sure the one you are buying works well.
Pros:
CRT
Good picture
Cheap to find
Entry level HDTV, supports wide mode, as well as 1080i, 720p, and 480i/p resolutions
Cons:
CRT
Can have large amounts of geometry/picture distortion problems
Fairly hard to find, if cheap when you do
Only supports analog signals
Heavy (140lbs)
Takes up unholy ammounts of space for a 32" set
Speakers are fairly average, about the same you find built in to equivelent LCD sets



