![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#41
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Jer" wrote in message ... Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? by the time it was on your screen it wouldn't be 480 native anymore - the tv would have altered it to the same resolution as the screen. -- Gareth. That fly... is your magic wand. |
|
#42
|
|||
|
|||
|
Jer wrote:
That's not how I understand it. Additional new pixels are inserted into the bit stream for each frame, "interpolated" from the adjacent pixels in the original bit stream. An upconverted 1080 signal contains more data than an original 480 signal, so it sounds to me like additional data is being added from somewhere. Alan wrote: It may be more data, but it is not more *information*. The question was is it better to do this in the DVD player, or in the TV set. Alan Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? If you have a HDTV panel in mind as the same TV testbed, how are you going to get a true native 480 image (if I correctly understand what you're getting at)? The TV will "expand" (interpolate) those 480i DVD native pixels to it's own TV native resolution. Aren't you back to racing interpolation between DVD player side and television side, again? If you use a CRT TV as the testbed reference, the results would be meaningless in the flat-panel world. winf |
|
#43
|
|||
|
|||
|
the dog from that film you saw wrote:
"Jer" wrote in message ... Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? by the time it was on your screen it wouldn't be 480 native anymore - the tv would have altered it to the same resolution as the screen. Yeah, okay... so let's presume, for the sake of argument, you could turn the upconversion feature on and off with a button. Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? -- jer email reply - I am not a 'ten' |
|
#44
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article Jer writes:
the dog from that film you saw wrote: "Jer" wrote in message ... Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? by the time it was on your screen it wouldn't be 480 native anymore - the tv would have altered it to the same resolution as the screen. Yeah, okay... so let's presume, for the sake of argument, you could turn the upconversion feature on and off with a button. Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? No, if it were not upconverted, it would be a teeny picture somewhere on the big screen. Alan |
|
#45
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Jer" wrote in message ... the dog from that film you saw wrote: "Jer" wrote in message ... Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? by the time it was on your screen it wouldn't be 480 native anymore - the tv would have altered it to the same resolution as the screen. Yeah, okay... so let's presume, for the sake of argument, you could turn the upconversion feature on and off with a button. Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? the 480 native picture would occupy a 640x480 pixel area in the middle of the screen and be surrounded by black on all 4 sides. you can experience this by connecting a pc to your tv via hdmi, turning off scaling on your pc and switching to 640x480 resolution. -- Gareth. That fly... is your magic wand. |
|
#46
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Mar 3, 11:30*pm, Jer wrote:
the dog from that film you saw wrote: "Jer" wrote in message ... Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? by the time it was on your screen it wouldn't be 480 native anymore - the tv would have altered it to the same resolution as the screen. Yeah, okay... so let's presume, for the sake of argument, you could turn the upconversion feature on and off with a button. *Would a 480 native image look the same as a 480 upconverted image on the same TV? -- jer email reply - I am not a 'ten' If you could turn off up-converting at both the TV and the source (say, DVD), the 480i/p image would occupy only a small portion of the screen: 640x480 (4:3) out of 1920x1080 for a 1080p screen. If either unit performs the up-conversion, the 640x480 native content would be converted up to 1440x1080. In the practical sense of watching an HDTV, up-converting and scaling refer to the same act: expanding a smaller pixel dimension image to fill a larger pixel dimention display. A really poor implementation would simply double every pixel (and triple every 4th). Unless you moved far enough away that your eyes could only distinguish every 4 pixels, the result would be larger but blocky. A slightly better implementation would not just create multiple identical pixels, but would smoothly interpolate intermediate values for the extra pixels. Now the result wouldn't look blocky, but it would look quite soft with blurry edges. A yet better up- conversion algorithm would interpolate the extra pixels, but would also perform edge detection and would leave edges single pixel to increase sharpness. And a yet better algorithm would interpolate, detect edges, and anti-alias edges to put intermediate value pixels along non-horizontal or non-vertical edges to prevent visible "stair stepping". And so on. (And by-the-way, as I've stated before, some TVs have the option of 1:1 viewing - no up-conversion. If your TV has the option, and you have an up-converting source, you can compare the effectiveness of each device for yourself.) As I hope you can see, there are many algorithms for up-converting, and the perceived quality of the results can vary greatly. Generally, better quality algorithms cost more (due to processing power and memory/buffering costs), though there could be exceptions. So, whether or not you will see a noticeable difference in picture from an up-converting DVD player versus a standard DVD player depends on the ability of both the DVD player and the TV to up-convert the video material. If you are really tempted, buy an up-converting unit from a store that takes returns and try it out. Ultimately, the best choice is the one *you* like the best. Dan (Woj...) |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| DVD Upconversion have a Noticeable difference in picture? | lbbss | Home theater (general) | 2 | February 28th 08 02:05 AM |
| Upconversion DVD players--really necessary? | Stuart E. Weiner | High definition TV | 7 | June 4th 06 12:07 AM |
| Freeview receivers--any difference in picture qualty? | David Wood | UK digital tv | 2 | November 8th 05 07:23 PM |
| Upconversion Pointless? | [email protected] | High definition TV | 18 | June 1st 05 12:18 PM |
| Is progressive scan noticeable? DVD/Component/ Wega etc. | Henree | Home theater (general) | 4 | October 2nd 04 02:47 AM |