The days of real, "like looking out a window" HD are gone unless you watch blueray or FTAHD. In fact, i haven't seen great HD on E* since the Voom days and HDnet was still Mpeg2. Maybe D* and E* will get in a Picture quality war after the current "who has the most HD" is over.
Indeed. One can only hope. IMHO, it's disgraceful to carry on about a "100% digital quality picture" when in some cases it's starting to take on the appearance of a blown-up, washed-out, soft and smeary, posterizied or banded, block and mosquito noise infested, artifact-ridden, resolution-reduced, glorified YouTube video! I guess they feel they can put anything out there and we have to take it...that is, once they have us in a contract.
To expand in more detail what I'm currently seeing: On the HD channels, any camera movement over things such as sky backgrounds have lots of weird random motion artifacts -- as if the encoder can't keep up with the data stream. Black and darker scenes are splotchier and blockier. Colors sometimes posterized or banded. The overall picture is simply softer, noisier and "dirtier". More fatiguing to watch. On several of the SD channels, it's even worse -- mosquito noise and jaggies out of control, as well as the usual breakup and macroblocking during fast motion. The worst part is that any inherent noise or grain in the picture -- such as in some old black and white movies -- just gets overcompressed along with the whole shebang, compounding everything and making for a really distracting experience.
Like I noted, when I first signed up in June, I considered the MPEG-4 compression artifacts on the Eastern Arc negligible -- with a still reasonably "clean" and pleasing picture to look at. I was realistic in not expecting Blu-Ray quality, but frankly, on a good day, I thought some channels and transfers came damn close enough. In fact, I felt that I made the right decision in terms of my carrier options and in jumping from my cable provider (Cox). Some of the standard-def channels were worse than others, but on the whole, I was content with the what I saw coming out of the HD Platinums, TCM and the HD Premiums (In all honesty, I wasn't even paying full attention to the HD sports channels like ESPN, etc.) In terms of my viewing interests, I started to notice a slight deterioration in either late August or early September, but nothing like the steep downward turn that I'm seeing in the last week or so. I can only surmise that it must have something to do with the bandwidth leeching from the mass and sudden influx of PBS HD channels that the FCC "forced" them into adding. In fact, IIRC, wasn't that Dish's main reason for stalling and fighting the mass high-def PBS add-ons for so long? That is, the hit their bandwidth "pipe" would have to take. Well, it ultimately looks like they had to throw picture pride right out the window, crank up that compression ratio, starve that bitrate and further shrink that usable bandwidth within an inch of its life -- and in my humble opinion the results are all too apparent. Seriously, I don't think it's being too picky to expect a viewing experience where the artifacts and picture don't distract. Maybe some folks don't notice or don't care...but I do. Especially when I'm paying a hefty chunk for the "privilege" of that noted "100% digital quality picture."
I guess the only option in them stopping this channel-war madness -- if they want to reclaim the quality talking point -- is to launch another satellite. But, what are the actual odds of that happening in the near future? I'm still interested in knowing the real-world technical specs of the Eastern Arc in terms of MPEG-4 capacity and the allotted bandwidth/bitrate for each channel that they're currently giving us. I'm also actually curious as what the current state is, visually, of Eastern compared to Western Arc. While MPEG-4 is obviously the more efficient compression scheme, I'd love to know just *how* far it's being pushed in terms of bandwidth allotment and bitrate on the Eastern Arc. Furthermore, how do the the two compression schemes (i.e. MPEG-4 vs. MPEG-2) visually compare when they're pushed to their limits?
PS - I'm watching a SD movie right now on Showtime Beyond that I DVR'ed yesterday, and it's absolutely dreadful. The term 'blown-up and glorified YouTube video isn't a stretch at all to describe it. Hideous. Yet, as mentioned, HD is only marginally better on some of the dedicated premium channels -- and that's not saying much. : (
--LR
PS - Thanks for all the comments so far!