Exactly. Look at some of the MPEG2 channels like HBO, SHO or DiscoveryTheater..the picture quality really sucks now. I don't even watch HBO or DiscTh any more. I dropped Showtime and will probably drop HBO too.
I watched some of Transformers on Cinemax HD last night and then I was watching TMNT this morning on Cinemax HD and there is definately a lot of pixelation or macro blocking during fast motion scenes. I understand that 1080i doesnt have as fast a frame rate as 720p or 1080p but to have those kinds of anomalies seems to be more of an over compression to me than it would be display format. The HD channels still look better then SD but ive definately seen better HD before...especially BD movies.
You're expecting way too much from TV. You'll never, ever be happy if you compare satellite HD to BluRay.
You might say that if you have never seen true 1080i not compressed. PBS used to broadcast it. Also C-Band sat HD is WAY better.
I have definitely seen it live along side uncompressed Pal and NTSC. In the early days PBS used to broadcast it on their C-Band feeds uncompressed. They didn't compress it the local stations did after they got it off the bird to rebroadcast it OTA. The same went for almost every station on the C-Band feeds. They sent it up uncompressed and the down link stations compressed it before putting it on cable or DBS or OTA. Much of it is still done that way. All re broadcasters like Dish, DTV, local networks get their feeds off C or KU band and then compress it to rebroadcast it.
Before the networks scrambled their feeds it was great. Although in those days there was little HD.
I have definitely seen it live along side uncompressed Pal and NTSC. In the early days PBS used to broadcast it on their C-Band feeds uncompressed. They didn't compress it the local stations did after they got it off the bird to rebroadcast it OTA. The same went for almost every station on the C-Band feeds. They sent it up uncompressed and the down link stations compressed it before putting it on cable or DBS or OTA. Much of it is still done that way. All re broadcasters like Dish, DTV, local networks get their feeds off C or KU band and then compress it to rebroadcast it.
Before the networks scrambled their feeds it was great. Although in those days there was little HD.