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#1 |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 2,834
Rep Power: 316
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Thanks for the info guys. So I assume that the new 1080p TV's don't buy you much for "broadcast" HD and are really meant for blueray or HDDVD? That is, nobody broadcasts anything in 1080p, is this right?
Last question. I have a Sony WEGA tube TV about 7 years old. When I do go HD, what should I do with my old TV? It's big and heavy and I guess it isn't worth anything. Maybe I should donate it to a church or something. |
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#2 |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 1,606
Rep Power: 281
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Nobody broadcasts in 1080p yet because it takes up too much bandwidth and the benefits aren't noticeable to hardly anybody.
I prefer a progressive signal of lower resolution to an interlaced signal of (sort of) higher resolution because I notice interlaced motion blur more than I notice any added clarity from the resolution, especially for something like a film transfer that comes across at 24 frames per second and has to go on a 30 or 60 fps display. 1080i and 720p are almost exactly the same amount of screen information, I just prefer it to be non-interlaced. |
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#3 |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 2,834
Rep Power: 316
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Thanks for the info Joe. By the way, have you seen the commercial with the large chested blonde in a cowboy hat that says "It's broadcast in 1080i! I so don't know what that means, but I won't it!" Pretty funny.... Can't even remember what the commercial was for. LOL
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#4 | |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,609
Rep Power: 290
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