Originally posted by: funkymatt
My wife is a pretty big cock fan so last night we watched the bluray of north by northwest. She was amazed at the detail that you could see and finally considered the old VHS and dvds to be inferior. haha, took long enough. Do any of your SO's not see the difference between standard definition and HD?
Originally posted by: spidey07
That's not high definition. All high definition is 16x9. That's standard definition on an HD channel.
Originally posted by: Modelworks
I hate it when movies/programs are in 4:3 ratio than I do when they are in SD vs HD.
Nice widescreen tv and even the nightly news likes to put everything in the center with banners on both sides of the screen, it is in HD though, great HD banners !
I can't win , when I had a 4:3 tv they letterboxed movies, now I get a 16:9 and they 4:3 stuff , sigh.
Originally posted by: TheTony
Originally posted by: spidey07
That's not high definition. All high definition is 16x9. That's standard definition on an HD channel.
Thats not entirely true. Many movies are presented in 2.35:1.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: TheTony
Originally posted by: spidey07
That's not high definition. All high definition is 16x9. That's standard definition on an HD channel.
Thats not entirely true. Many movies are presented in 2.35:1.
*facepalm*
You knew what I meant. HDTV is indeed only 16x9. There can be 4x3 content on it but that's only if the original was 4x3 like blue-ray TV shows or very old 4x3 movies.
If you see side bars on an HD channel, the source is NOT HD. It's SD converted to HD.
Originally posted by: Barfo
Originally posted by: funkymatt
My wife is a pretty big cock fan so last night we watched the bluray of north by northwest. She was amazed at the detail that you could see and finally considered the old VHS and dvds to be inferior. haha, took long enough. Do any of your SO's not see the difference between standard definition and HD?
First time I read the OP I thought it said this :laugh:
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: TheTony
Originally posted by: spidey07
That's not high definition. All high definition is 16x9. That's standard definition on an HD channel.
Thats not entirely true. Many movies are presented in 2.35:1.
*facepalm*
You knew what I meant. HDTV is indeed only 16x9. There can be 4x3 content on it but that's only if the original was 4x3 like blue-ray TV shows or very old 4x3 movies.
If you see side bars on an HD channel, the source is NOT HD. It's SD converted to HD.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Why did they ever make 4:3 HDTVs then?
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Why did they ever make 4:3 HDTVs then?
Because people are dumb.
Originally posted by: lokiju
When I put on HD vs SD she can clearly see the difference but for some damn reason time and time again I come home and she has a show on in SD that is available in HD.
Originally posted by: Modelworks
One other thing to consider is that all content is not created equal. Just because the video fits the standard doesn't mean it will look great. Some high quality SD looks better than poor quality HD.
Originally posted by: AstroManLuca
Originally posted by: lokiju
When I put on HD vs SD she can clearly see the difference but for some damn reason time and time again I come home and she has a show on in SD that is available in HD.
Did you know that most TVs allow you to deactivate certain channels? I went into my parents' TV and deactivated all the SD versions of channels that are available in HD, so now when they scroll through their channels, they only get good quality shows.
Oh, wait. I just remembered that my parents just use the antenna. Most people these days seem to have digital cable or satellite so I'm not sure how it works in that case. Can you disable channels on a cable/satellite box?
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: AstroManLuca
Originally posted by: lokiju
When I put on HD vs SD she can clearly see the difference but for some damn reason time and time again I come home and she has a show on in SD that is available in HD.
Did you know that most TVs allow you to deactivate certain channels? I went into my parents' TV and deactivated all the SD versions of channels that are available in HD, so now when they scroll through their channels, they only get good quality shows.
Oh, wait. I just remembered that my parents just use the antenna. Most people these days seem to have digital cable or satellite so I'm not sure how it works in that case. Can you disable channels on a cable/satellite box?
LOL!
Use the parental lock out feature to lock out channels. Only this time you're locking out your parents from watching SD!
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: AstroManLuca
Originally posted by: lokiju
When I put on HD vs SD she can clearly see the difference but for some damn reason time and time again I come home and she has a show on in SD that is available in HD.
Did you know that most TVs allow you to deactivate certain channels? I went into my parents' TV and deactivated all the SD versions of channels that are available in HD, so now when they scroll through their channels, they only get good quality shows.
Oh, wait. I just remembered that my parents just use the antenna. Most people these days seem to have digital cable or satellite so I'm not sure how it works in that case. Can you disable channels on a cable/satellite box?
LOL!
Use the parental lock out feature to lock out channels. Only this time you're locking out your parents from watching SD!
Originally posted by: TheTony
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Why did they ever make 4:3 HDTVs then?
Because people are dumb.
4:3 HDTVs do (or did at one point) make sense when there was a small amount of HD programming available. They also cost considerably less, until widescreen sets moved past the early adopter stage.
Originally posted by: DontMindMe
we both notice, but I guess we don't care enough...