I have been thinking about this for awhile and decided to throw this out here. How many of you know the actually resolution of your HD set?
The reason I asked is that very few of you actually own a 1920x1080i set. Most of you probably have a 1200 by 1080i set and do not know it. There are very few 1920x1080i sets on the market and they are very expensive to own. Most all of the sets under 50" are 1200 x 1080i.
Here is my point. Even to reach these numbers manufacturers are using line doublers. Even the brand new DLPs that are boasting 1920x1080 are actually 960x1080 then doubled. There are HD units that do 1920x1080 but the masses will not be getting there hands on them so why all the crying about D* or E* showing 1200x1080i or even 1440 x 1080I (This is the resolution used by most of the manufactures for their best line of sets)?
Your set will not be able to show the complete picture in a 1920x1080i format. I believe that when HD goes to MPEG4 you will see a marked decrease in picture anomilies and then you will start to see a very clear picture and you will be very pleased with your HD viewing.
When Voom was showing 1440x1080i the picture was very sharp and very clear. Even now, some of the things I watch on Voom's channels is remarkably clear. Especially those shot in HD. This is where the problem really is. Upconverting is what most of us watch on these HD channels and that is why the pictures are not as sharp as OTA HD. And by the way, most OTA HD is not 1920x1080i. If your digital station has multiple channels and is showing different programs on each channel at the same time then you are not receiving 1920x1080i. You are probably watching 1440x1080i or even 1280x768p. You need the whole digital signal to broadcast 1920x1080i.
I hope that my next set will be able to do 1920x1080i without a line doubler -- but that will not be soon. I will have to be happy with my Pioneer Elite 58" till I can afford a real 1920x1080i set. As for my wife, it looks like she wants a 32" LCD for the bedroom. Now try and find one of those in a 1280x768p format!
The reason I asked is that very few of you actually own a 1920x1080i set. Most of you probably have a 1200 by 1080i set and do not know it. There are very few 1920x1080i sets on the market and they are very expensive to own. Most all of the sets under 50" are 1200 x 1080i.
Here is my point. Even to reach these numbers manufacturers are using line doublers. Even the brand new DLPs that are boasting 1920x1080 are actually 960x1080 then doubled. There are HD units that do 1920x1080 but the masses will not be getting there hands on them so why all the crying about D* or E* showing 1200x1080i or even 1440 x 1080I (This is the resolution used by most of the manufactures for their best line of sets)?
Your set will not be able to show the complete picture in a 1920x1080i format. I believe that when HD goes to MPEG4 you will see a marked decrease in picture anomilies and then you will start to see a very clear picture and you will be very pleased with your HD viewing.
When Voom was showing 1440x1080i the picture was very sharp and very clear. Even now, some of the things I watch on Voom's channels is remarkably clear. Especially those shot in HD. This is where the problem really is. Upconverting is what most of us watch on these HD channels and that is why the pictures are not as sharp as OTA HD. And by the way, most OTA HD is not 1920x1080i. If your digital station has multiple channels and is showing different programs on each channel at the same time then you are not receiving 1920x1080i. You are probably watching 1440x1080i or even 1280x768p. You need the whole digital signal to broadcast 1920x1080i.
I hope that my next set will be able to do 1920x1080i without a line doubler -- but that will not be soon. I will have to be happy with my Pioneer Elite 58" till I can afford a real 1920x1080i set. As for my wife, it looks like she wants a 32" LCD for the bedroom. Now try and find one of those in a 1280x768p format!