http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage...CategoryId=pcmcat31800050031&id=1051826205151
Is it the tv of my dreams or nightmares?
Is it the tv of my dreams or nightmares?
Solution: Don't use streteching. Ever widecreen TV I've tested had a "normal" mode where 4x3 was displayed in true aspect (with bars on the left & right).Secondly stretched 4x3 sources on a 16x9 TV look like ass.
If you're watching standard old-format TV/games, why do you need HDTV? Standard-definition is only 480 scanlines... so why do you need a 1080 display? (just curious)
At first glance, the idea of a sub-$500 HDTV sounds farfetched. We were skeptical, too, until we actually took a hard look at the HT2751A. Let’s be clear. The HT2751A isn’t aimed at the home theater connoisseur who needs a 60-inch screen. With a 27-inch screen, the HT2751A is small, even by traditional TV standards. The HT2751A’s screen uses a 4:3 format but can display HD content either in 16:9 mode or in Zoom mode, stretching the image to fill the entire screen.
We thought that SD (standard definition) broadcasts looked as good on the HT2751A as on a good analog set, with crisp colors and respectable sharpness, but we were really impressed with the TV when we switched to HD content. Although the screen’s real estate is limited, it’s the quality, not the quantity, that counts. The HT2751A acquitted itself very well when we watched video in a widescreen, 16:9 format with only slight amounts of motion blur. The TV’s image was crisp, and color rendition was very good. We didn’t like the Zoom mode because a bit of compression was evident, and the TV had to crop a small amount of the material out of view. However, with HD broadcasts still relatively rare, the HT2751A is a good hybrid TV.
Is the HT2751A a smart way to step into the world of HD? Based on its price and performance, we’d have to say yes.![]()
Also, "technically" a NTSC TV displays 525 scanlines... first the odd, then the even.
It's barf because I want ____x1080i, or at a minimum ____x720p. This projector only does _____x480p which is not HD. It's SD.The projector has a resolution higher then an analog tv (720x480) set so how can they make you barf?
Nope. 16:9 converts to 1.77777777777... : 1 ;-)There is no ratio that is 1.77:1, its 1.78:1.
I already answered this question. Yes widescreen tv has bars, but the bars will be smaller on a 1.78:1 screen than on a 1.3:1 screen. Take a 1.85:1 film like Indiana ones. The old "square" screen would have large bars on the top and bottom. In comparision, the widescreen tv would just have thin slices of black. BOTTOM LINE: It looks better on the widescreen.Either way take a cinematic film like Indiana Jones, which is 2.35:1 you are going to get bars on a 16x9. Take a smaller film like Batman which is 1.66:1 and you'll get bars... tell me again how that differs from a 4x3 and what the advantage is?
yepFrankly, this was an awesome discussion between us. I wish it wasn't buried deep in here. Oh well, if anyone wanted a primer on HD they just got it.