Large, true 1080p HDTVs are now creeping below $2000 from local brick & mortar stores, such as these from Circuit City:
Samsung 50" DLP $1799
Samsung 56" DLP $1949
Sony 50" SXRD $1999
It is a shame that mass market HD providers continue to further degrade their HD retransmission via down-rezzing and inadequate bandwidth.
A year ago E* was providing higher quality HD channels than they are now. But HDTVs that could really show off the good HD channels were pretty expensive. Now those TVs are moving into mainstream pricing ranges, but the good HD channels are disappearing.
Of course a lot of sub-32" LCD HDTVs are being sold that have a max resolution of 1280x720 (some of them even lower) and those customers are much less likely to notice the quality degradation.
As these 1080p sets are sure to continue to get cheaper and move more and more into popular price ranges, it exciting to think about what we might be able to purchase for $1500 in 2 years. I sure hope that improvements in MPEG4 compression can get the quality levels up again so that we can once again ooh and aah watching DishHD on our shiny new 1080p sets.
Samsung 50" DLP $1799
Samsung 56" DLP $1949
Sony 50" SXRD $1999
It is a shame that mass market HD providers continue to further degrade their HD retransmission via down-rezzing and inadequate bandwidth.
A year ago E* was providing higher quality HD channels than they are now. But HDTVs that could really show off the good HD channels were pretty expensive. Now those TVs are moving into mainstream pricing ranges, but the good HD channels are disappearing.
Of course a lot of sub-32" LCD HDTVs are being sold that have a max resolution of 1280x720 (some of them even lower) and those customers are much less likely to notice the quality degradation.
As these 1080p sets are sure to continue to get cheaper and move more and more into popular price ranges, it exciting to think about what we might be able to purchase for $1500 in 2 years. I sure hope that improvements in MPEG4 compression can get the quality levels up again so that we can once again ooh and aah watching DishHD on our shiny new 1080p sets.