[quote name='io']The cheap shipping took 12 hours for me. What is potentially slow is Nintendo's processing of said order. That part took 6 days.
So, just got finished with my first Zelda session. Zelda looks great. HOWEVER, I was not overly impressed with the Wii Menu/Mii Channel changes. The Wii menu looks identical. The Mii Channel actually looks, *gasp*, worse. Why? Because I now see nice clear stairstepping on the edges of characters - such that it is actually annoying when they sway back and forth and you see the pixels crawl up and down along their edges - if you know what I mean. It was like a

ing PS2 game

. The composite cables add a nice fuzzy anti-aliasing effect to the graphics that seems to work nicely on the Miis, in any case.
If anyone has the Paris Hilton Mii from vgamergirl it is very obvious on this one because she used the thin nose type and made it very small - her nose actually disappears and reappears as she rocks back and forth. I never saw this with the composite cables.
Also, on Zelda, when you fish, does the fishing line look like it is dashed? It has big, evenly spaced gaps, due to the low resolution/very thin line combo. I'm not sure if this happens with composite cables or not - but it is very clear with the component. These issues stem from the same problem (a sub-pixel szie object being rendered).
On the plus side, I didn't really notice this but my daughter claims the Mii Channel is much brighter and more vivid now. The Photo Channel did seem to be much improved - pictures much clearer and brighter.
I'm about to try a Wii Sports session to see if that looks any different.[/QUOTE]
While I still don't have component cables, I also noticed that things like the Miis and Wii Sports look a hell of a lot better than Zelda on composite.
Perhaps the simplistic graphics of Wii Sports and the Miis work better somewhat blurry, rather than razor sharp.