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1080i OTA on 32"
What is it called when a 32" LCD needs to display a 1080i OTA signal but
only has a native resolution of 1366 x 768? Does that scenario have the same potential for displaying a poor picture as scaling a smaller OTA (720p) on a display that has 1080i native resolution? Thanks, Dan Foxley |
A lot depends on you set's scaling software and electronics. On my Sony CRT
with a native resolution of 1080i, an original 720p signal (as ABC originates it) looks great. The reverse would look good too with good scaling electronics. David "Dan Foxley" danfatnospamnethere.com wrote in message ... What is it called when a 32" LCD needs to display a 1080i OTA signal but only has a native resolution of 1366 x 768? Does that scenario have the same potential for displaying a poor picture as scaling a smaller OTA (720p) on a display that has 1080i native resolution? Thanks, Dan Foxley |
Dan Foxley wrote:
What is it called when a 32" LCD needs to display a 1080i OTA signal but only has a native resolution of 1366 x 768? Downconverting Does that scenario have the same potential for displaying a poor picture as scaling a smaller OTA (720p) on a display that has 1080i native resolution? Thanks, Dan Foxley |
Dan Foxley wrote:
What is it called when a 32" LCD needs to display a 1080i OTA signal but only has a native resolution of 1366 x 768? Does that scenario have the same potential for displaying a poor picture as scaling a smaller OTA (720p) on a display that has 1080i native resolution? Thanks, Dan Foxley Al digital TVs scale the picture from the signal source: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i to the resolution of the display. Even a 1920x1080 LCD is a progressive display, so it has to scale the 1080i interleaved signal to progressive. Don't get too hung up on 1920x1080 resolution for smaller TVs under 40" to 50" unless you intend to use it as a desktop PC monitor. The angular resolution of the human eye is generally regarded to be around 1 arc minute. At a typical sitting distance from the screen of 8 to 10 feet for a 32" or 37" widescreen, you would be hard pressed to tell the difference between 1280x720, 1366x768, and 1920x1080 screens. In fact, you would be unlikely to tell the difference at all. The benefits of a true 1080 display really don't come into play for watching TV until you get to 50" or bigger. Improved pixel resolution is just part of the story with HD. All digital with the elimination of analog noise, better and more accurate color, progressive for the 720p channels are important too. Alan F |
On Fri, 19 Aug 2005 07:53:20 -0700 Dan Foxley danfatnospamnethere.com wrote:
| What is it called when a 32" LCD needs to display a 1080i OTA signal but | only has a native resolution of 1366 x 768? I would call it "something to avoid buying" under those conditions. Matthew L. Martin would probably call it "wrong use of the term resolution". | Does that scenario have the same potential for displaying a poor picture as | scaling a smaller OTA (720p) on a display that has 1080i native resolution? You can't get more than 720 lines out of either case. Ideally, upscaling 720 to 1080 should maintain all 720 lines. If the display is operating in interlace mode, you will possibly see more artifacts and less motion quality than if it were operating in 1080 progressive mode. A really good upscaler could synthesize extra apparent resolution and give you the look and feel of 1080 on a 720 signal. But the difference between 1080 and 720 is not enough to make such tricks worthwhile, IMHO. That might be nice on a 2160 display. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Phil Howard KA9WGN | http://linuxhomepage.com/ http://ham.org/ | | (first name) at ipal.net | http://phil.ipal.org/ http://ka9wgn.ham.org/ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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