RaynorWolfcastle
Diamond Member
- Feb 8, 2001
- 8,968
- 16
- 81
A am fairly certain that this article has been around for awhile and most of what it says doesn't really apply any more.
1) There are 1080p60 capable displays that accept 1080p60 through HDMI.
2) HD-DVDs are encoded as 1080p24, so this "there is no 1080p content available" hypothesis goes out the window. (It is true however that the initial Toshiba units cannot output 1080p, but upcoming units will)
3) I vaguely remember reading that wobulation works at 120Hz to give you a 1080p60 image, so I'm quite doubtful that anyone can actually see any difference between it and 1080p60 generated from a 1920 x 1080 microdisplay.
4) If you're worried about scaling, get an external scaler and/or deinterlacer, there are now several chips that employ more sophisticated algorithms that don't resort to halving the resolution to generate a 1080p signal.
1) There are 1080p60 capable displays that accept 1080p60 through HDMI.
2) HD-DVDs are encoded as 1080p24, so this "there is no 1080p content available" hypothesis goes out the window. (It is true however that the initial Toshiba units cannot output 1080p, but upcoming units will)
3) I vaguely remember reading that wobulation works at 120Hz to give you a 1080p60 image, so I'm quite doubtful that anyone can actually see any difference between it and 1080p60 generated from a 1920 x 1080 microdisplay.
4) If you're worried about scaling, get an external scaler and/or deinterlacer, there are now several chips that employ more sophisticated algorithms that don't resort to halving the resolution to generate a 1080p signal.
