I have been reading about down resolution of HD by both Sat providers and I have done a little research. Here are the results.
The FCC has two HD formats. One is 1280x720p and the other is 1920x1080i. They consider that both are True HD formats.
The HDTV manufacturers have used the following resolutions to produce HDTVs.
1280x720p, 1280x1280i, 1366x768p, 1200x1080i, 1440x1080i , 1600x1080i, 1920x1080i and the new and improved 1920x1080p.
The last the 1920x1080p is very interesting, less than half of all HDTVs claiming this actually have a 1920x1080p input! No set manufactured before the summer of 2005 has a 1920x1080p input because there were no sources doing that output.
Now after reading this both E* and D* are meeting the lower form of HD from the FCC by broadcasting 1280x1080i. While this is not the highest form of HD nor is it the lowest alowed by the FCC. If you are viewing anything but 2006 model LCD or DLP or any RPTV under 60" then they are meeting the highest resolution your set can produce. Let the naysayers begin!!
The FCC has two HD formats. One is 1280x720p and the other is 1920x1080i. They consider that both are True HD formats.
The HDTV manufacturers have used the following resolutions to produce HDTVs.
1280x720p, 1280x1280i, 1366x768p, 1200x1080i, 1440x1080i , 1600x1080i, 1920x1080i and the new and improved 1920x1080p.
The last the 1920x1080p is very interesting, less than half of all HDTVs claiming this actually have a 1920x1080p input! No set manufactured before the summer of 2005 has a 1920x1080p input because there were no sources doing that output.
Now after reading this both E* and D* are meeting the lower form of HD from the FCC by broadcasting 1280x1080i. While this is not the highest form of HD nor is it the lowest alowed by the FCC. If you are viewing anything but 2006 model LCD or DLP or any RPTV under 60" then they are meeting the highest resolution your set can produce. Let the naysayers begin!!
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