]jpn said:witout absolutely stunning picture quality, the masses won't spend their money on more big-screens.
Sure they will. Why don't you think Best Buy couldn't keep their el cheapo 42" plasmas on the shelf over the holiday season?
]jpn said:witout absolutely stunning picture quality, the masses won't spend their money on more big-screens.
I'm not sure my Congressman or Senator is going to care a whole lot about what resolution my HD satellite provider is broadcasting. Complaints might be better directed to the satellite providers, they need us to keep paying to stay in business. Might be worth sending an e-mail to the FTC also.jpn said:Congress is where it's got to be dealt-with. Complain to your senator that HD-Lite is not why you boosted the economy when you bought your big-screen; and tell them that witout absolutely stunning picture quality, the masses won't spend their money on more big-screens.
E* only does it on the voom channelsScottChez said:Dishnetwork and DIrect TV both do HD Lite, My Cox Cable DOES NOT do HD Lite.
It must be a DBS SAT Limitation of Bandwidth.
E* only does it on the voom channels
Your misunderstanding is due to the fact that you are only looking at one part of the equation.ejdowden said:I'm a little confused on the HD Lite stuff. On my OTA I see progams coming in at 1080i and 720p. If D* sends stuff at 1080i thats HD right? Are you all saying that since they compress the signal ito mpeg2 or mpeg4 that it looses detail in the compression and its not truely 1080i? If this is the case then how could they ever send lossless HD since they all compress even DISH?
thomastchen said:Display resolution is alway relative. currently, DBS HD is the only source for 1080i other than computer generated video.
thomastchen said:Some time this year, the Blue Ray/ HD DVD will be available and 1080p will become a better resolution as a source than DBS HD.
thomastchen said:Clearly 1280x1080i is better than SD. I am sure pretty soon, some people are going to complain about 1080i. Especically now that the 1080p plasma and LCD HDTVs are out.
Mike McGann said:Boo hoo. My car can only go 175 miles an hour and it's supposed to go 200.
Nevermind that the local roads can only be driven at 140 at best.
Please, just stop whining.
As an ISF certified tech — and someone who's seen D* truncated 1280 signal since it was announced — it's just not that horrible. The vast, vast majority of TVs cannot display resolution beyond 720 by 1280 anyhow, so frankly, a well-done 540p by 1280 signal works for 90 percent of the households in the US.
It's not like the broadcast signals are always better — in a lot of markets it is exactly the same.
Just go get cable and stop whining. Unlike most of you, I have the training to look at a picture and figure out where data loss impacts it — and where broadcast encoding errors hurt the picture.
If you demand your 19.39 MB/sec. of video data, fine. Enjoy your three channels. The rest of us will enjoy dozens of channels in exchange for a slightly less sharp (although in Philadelphia, except for the CBS signal, it's virtually impossible to see the difference).
If you don't like the product, don't buy it. Millions of other people, however, will continue to enjoy D*.
I wish only two things: that they had more programming and were less dependent on signal at 110 and 119.
24fps has plenty of flicker and a very long time ago, movies were actually shown at that rate.splam said:... Every movie theater in this country broadcasts their shows at 24fps, which unless you're a gamer with a complex about such things is plenty of framerate for the human eye....