Originally posted by: puffpio
The issue here is talking about films on blu ray or something
hence they are not true interlaced video..but telecined movie
therefore a deinterlacer is never even used so no deinterlace quality applies to 1080i movies...you would use a standard inverse telecine which would reconstruct a 24fps progressive frame
with a 1080p movie the tv would just decimate duplicate frames to achieve 24 fps progressive..
so the content would be the same..
now..with a TRUE interlaced 1080i video, not a movie that has been telecined..then there would be a difference
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
I have both 1080i and 1080p HDTV sets. Honestly, they both look amazing, and there is not enough of a noticable difference between the two. It's marketing hype- Plain and simple.
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
I have both 1080i and 1080p HDTV sets. Honestly, they both look amazing, and there is not enough of a noticable difference between the two. It's marketing hype- Plain and simple.
Originally posted by: MrChad
1080p is overrated. Most TVs that even claim to have the resolution have no inputs capable of receiving it.
Exactly. The only way I can tell if I'm watching 720p content or 1080i content on my 1080i CRT HDTV is to check. All of you just shut up and enjoy the hi-def goodness.
Originally posted by: UNCjigga
1080p makes a HUGE FRICKIN DIFFERENCE for anything HTPC related--and yes it is noticeable!
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Isn't only half a frame projected at any moment during interlaced playback? How much deinterlacing does a TV actually do?
Originally posted by: CPA
Originally posted by: MrChad
1080p is overrated. Most TVs that even claim to have the resolution have no inputs capable of receiving it.
And to think I got hammered for buying a Phillips 1080i plasma because it didn't project in 1080p. I'm convinced that most people don't know squat about the formats.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Isn't only half a frame projected at any moment during interlaced playback? How much deinterlacing does a TV actually do?
60 times a second.
Basically takes each of the two fields that are interlaced to create a single frame.
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Isn't only half a frame projected at any moment during interlaced playback? How much deinterlacing does a TV actually do?
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
Just got my new 1080p DLP TV today.![]()
Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
Just got my new 1080p DLP TV today.![]()
HA... I'm watching that show right now!
