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Quote from: BobM on 4 Dec 2006, 08:13 pmQuote from: Levi on 4 Dec 2006, 07:40 pmCongrats! Is that a 1080p display? Yeah, its 480p/720p/1080i, 10000:1 contrast ratio, 2 HDMI connections.If it's 480p/720p/1080i screen, then it's not 1080p... Still a superb TV....
Quote from: Levi on 4 Dec 2006, 07:40 pmCongrats! Is that a 1080p display? Yeah, its 480p/720p/1080i, 10000:1 contrast ratio, 2 HDMI connections.
Congrats! Is that a 1080p display?
I am considering a new video display purchase to go with my Onkyo Sp1000 player which includes the HDMI, whatever that means! I am considering this a Samsung 46" DLP HDTV because I like what I see.Would someone be so kind as to shed a little light on the differences between 720, 1080I and P and HDMI?Thank you and Happy Holidays!
Quote from: budyog on 5 Dec 2006, 05:03 pmI am considering a new video display purchase to go with my Inky Sp1000 player which includes the HDMI, whatever that means! I am considering this a Samsung 46" DLP HDTV because I like what I see.Would someone be so kind as to shed a little light on the differences between 720, 1080I and P and HDMI?Thank you and Happy Holidays!I got an Elite 1130-HD on closeout at the end of the summer and have just gone through this learning process. IMO - there is very little (if any) difference in PQ among the various up sampled outputs for DVD players vs. 480i/480p - this is viewing on a 50inch HDTV plasma. I think 'up-sampling' is a marketing gimmick for most players. Each resolution mode may product some differences - but not necessarily better image quality. With an HDTV, you will also have the scaling (aka up-sampling) and deinterlacing capabilities in the set itself, and often the TV produces better results than the DVD player. I prefer using the 1130HD for these functions over my Denon DVD player, which I have outputing 480p. Of course every combination is different and you have a very good DVD player - so you can experiment. HDMI is useful if you plan on routing all video & digital through a receiver - but beyond that convenience it doesn't offer any visible advantage over component connections. Of course using HDMI also reduces cable clutter & many DVD players only provide upsampled output via HDMI for copy protection reasons. I would not pay extra for a 1080p set. All current HDTV programming is compressed 720p/1080i and will not be 1080p in the forseeable future due to limited bandwidth. The better HDTV's have good noise reduction to deal with these compression artifacts and also make standard definition programming more bearable. I would imagine on HDDVD & Blueray 1080p sources (are there 1080p discs yet?) any perceivable advantage of 1080p would be dependant on the size of the display & viewing distance.
I am considering a new video display purchase to go with my Inky Sp1000 player which includes the HDMI, whatever that means! I am considering this a Samsung 46" DLP HDTV because I like what I see.Would someone be so kind as to shed a little light on the differences between 720, 1080I and P and HDMI?Thank you and Happy Holidays!
Are you certain your set isn't "locked" into an upconverting mode....meaning maybe your set is sampling different "up samples" into say 1080i?Last Saturday, I showed my family the different up sampling modes from our new Oppo 970. It was unanimous that 1080i was far superior to 480p (if 100 people were in the room no one would have said there was little difference). Frankly, on our set 1080i DVD is markedly better than 720p DVD. 1080i and 720p HDTV signals are indistinguishable.
Yup, you're right (my mixup). But from what I've been reading I don't think I'll be missing much until Blu Ray and such becomes more mass market.
Another price drop today... Panasonic TH-50PH9UK for $1699.99 shipped to your door after $100 rebates from NewEggs.com
Quote from: F-100 on 19 Dec 2006, 04:28 pmAnother price drop today... Panasonic TH-50PH9UK for $1699.99 shipped to your door after $100 rebates from NewEggs.comThis is not real....it used to be $3200 shipped about 6 months ago
Quote from: F-100 on 19 Dec 2006, 04:28 pmAnother price drop today... Panasonic TH-50PH9UK for $1699.99 shipped to your door after $100 rebates from NewEggs.comOk, minor correction, you have to add $99 to shipping..
HDMI is useful if you plan on routing all video & digital through a receiver - but beyond that convenience it doesn't offer any visible advantage over component connections. Of course using HDMI also reduces cable clutter & many DVD players only provide upsampled output via HDMI for copy protection reasons. I would not pay extra for a 1080p set. All current HDTV programming is compressed 720p/1080i and will not be 1080p in the forseeable future due to limited bandwidth. The better HDTV's have good noise reduction to deal with these compression artifacts and also make standard definition programming more bearable. I would imagine on HDDVD & Blueray 1080p sources (are there 1080p discs yet?) any perceivable advantage of 1080p would be dependant on the size of the display & viewing distance.