I see 1.3 as being useful eventually. PS3 and computers might benefit. But, there are concerns right now (Microsoft bashing PS3) that PS3 will have problems running fast enough to generate 1920x1080i imagesat a good frame rate, much less using deep colors. Graphics cards in computers will eventually be able to use the deep color of 1.3 without problems.
The other problem is display technology. Displays are just starting to work their way off of 8bits/color. HDMI 1.1 can do 12 bits per color, but very few displays can do 12 bit. More bits helps with rounding errors, but does not create content where there is no content (like HD-DVD and BR which are not encoded with deep color, and they cannot go change the standard all the sudden).
Audio has some benefits too, and prehaps this is where the most use of 1.3 will come into play to process advanced codecs, allowing cheaper players to come out without them needing to decode everything.
Now, perhaps one day there will be services where you can download an HD movie to your computer with 48bit color and true HD soundtracks and that will be able to fully use 1.3. Of course you will have to hook it up to a new display that can actually show that many colors and a receiver that can decode the audio.
Some plasmas are claiming 12 bit (4096 shades of grey). Some other displays like LCD claim 12 bit processing, but the panels are still limited to 8 bit. They just can blend adjacent pixels with enough processing power to give the look of more than 8 bits/pixel.
As with anything you buy now in the high end of AV it will be obsolete in 5 years anyways, by then HDMI 1.3 might be useful. I would not worry about it right now, yes a nice feature if you get it, but at least a year before anything will actually be able to use a feature (most likely audio decoders in receivers). And several years before display technology can use it...
The other problem is display technology. Displays are just starting to work their way off of 8bits/color. HDMI 1.1 can do 12 bits per color, but very few displays can do 12 bit. More bits helps with rounding errors, but does not create content where there is no content (like HD-DVD and BR which are not encoded with deep color, and they cannot go change the standard all the sudden).
Audio has some benefits too, and prehaps this is where the most use of 1.3 will come into play to process advanced codecs, allowing cheaper players to come out without them needing to decode everything.
Now, perhaps one day there will be services where you can download an HD movie to your computer with 48bit color and true HD soundtracks and that will be able to fully use 1.3. Of course you will have to hook it up to a new display that can actually show that many colors and a receiver that can decode the audio.
Some plasmas are claiming 12 bit (4096 shades of grey). Some other displays like LCD claim 12 bit processing, but the panels are still limited to 8 bit. They just can blend adjacent pixels with enough processing power to give the look of more than 8 bits/pixel.
As with anything you buy now in the high end of AV it will be obsolete in 5 years anyways, by then HDMI 1.3 might be useful. I would not worry about it right now, yes a nice feature if you get it, but at least a year before anything will actually be able to use a feature (most likely audio decoders in receivers). And several years before display technology can use it...