What this basically means is that to get the most out of Blu ray you don't just need a Blu ray player and disc. You also need a good hi def TV with a new sound system. Which can easily rank up in the thousands of dollars.The reader itself is but a mere fraction of that total cost.
But with a lesser quality HD TV set you won't be able to get all the supposed greatness of the BR technology
Not my style, but your comment is kind of pointless...Since when an HD TV is needed to get the complete quality of a regular dvd? Never of course...
Sorry, but many CRT TVs had insufficient lines of resolution to fully utilize the DVD format. The initial digital TVs manufactured were 480P. DVD is a 720P format which means that these TVs could not fully take advantage of the DVD format.
Quote from: Hal on October 18, 2010, 09:23:21 PMSorry, but many CRT TVs had insufficient lines of resolution to fully utilize the DVD format. The initial digital TVs manufactured were 480P. DVD is a 720P format which means that these TVs could not fully take advantage of the DVD format.Are you sure about that? 720P last I checked was considered "HD".. For R1 NTSC, DVD-Video, lat I checked, were encoded at 720x480.. which means 480P (480 lines of resolution)Unless I'm mistaken.. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD-Video#Frame_size_and_frame_rate
People want HD, Jimmy.
I don't have any more time to waste on this stupid discussion... Sound too much like a clueless discussion like we see everyday on the DVDP forum.
To be honest, I don't think most of us represent the regular joe costumer so the fact that Jon, Hal or me spent 2000$ or more to make the switch isn't really relevant...
OTOH, they did that with Obamacare, didn't they?