Thanks for saving me some typing, lacunae! I haven't really needed a keyboard since there is no TV-out solution (not even using s-video) that makes readable text on the TV screen unless the text size is huge. Forget reading these forums on your TV! I don't play games from the other room, just watch DVD's and play Winamp and stuff like that. I have a computer in my family room and send its output to the TV in my bedroom. For playing games (in the family room) I just have my regular mouse and keyboard on long extension cables, that has worked fine so far.
RxL77-
Regular (i.e., non-HDTV) TVs are analog, not digital, so resolution in the computer sense of the word doesn't really apply. Whereas on a computer monitor when you say, for example, 640x480 at 85Hz, that means (essentially) that the screen is divided into 640 units from left to right and 480 units from top to bottom, no more and no less, and each line is drawn one after another, and each screenfull of lines is drawn 85 times each second (85Hz).
A TV is a little different. A TV draws alternating lines over two passes of the screen. Each of these "fields" is drawn every 1/60th of a second, and 2 fields make up one "frame", so the apparent refresh rate is 30 frames per second (or 30Hz). The standards that govern what a TV signal should be are called NTSC in North America and a few other places and PAL in the rest of the world. They are quite similar in concept except for significant differences in the timing and level of certain signals, and they are incompatible with each other. Standard NTSC video is limited to a resolution of approximately 540 horizontal scan lines, or 2- 270 line fields (compared with 480 horizontal scan lines in the computer example). The resolution of detail left-to-right is a function of the video amplifier's bandwidth, or how fast it can change the beams of electrons as they scan across the screen. Higher bandwidth = faster changes = higher apparent resolution. (This concept also applies to CRT-based computer monitors since the digital image signal from the graphics card frame buffer is converted to analog by the RAMDAC before being sent to the analog monitor). The usual way to measure horizontal (left-to-right) resolution on an analog display is by using test patterns and visually estimating where a series of needle pulses turn into a gray blob.
DVD's have up to 540 horizontal lines, hi-quality VHS tapes up to about 400 lines, and the theoretical best you can get from regular broadcast TV is 320 lines (limited by the maximum bandwidth available to a broadcast channel).
There's more to it than that, of course, and hopefully this isn't too confusing, but if you need more explanation please ask.