![]() |
|
|||
|
1080I or 1080P?
Haven't made the plunge into any HD DVD player. By reading the forums here it appears the Toshiba HD format is the way to go over blu-ray. At the local wal-mart they had quite a few Toshiba players and in reading the box I see it's it's only in 1080I and not 1080P like the blu-ray. Isn't the 1080P format a better picture?? and can a HD DVD player only give you the best picture on a TV that is 1080P? (I have one LCD that is 1080i and another that is 1080P)
Scott/Omaha |
|
||||
|
Quote:
L8
__________________
Editor - www.hidef.com "True adaptability involves changing ones self to meet ones environment, not changing ones environment to meet ones needs" - Species8472 |
|
|||
|
Quote:
The difference between the two is one is progressive and the other is interlaced. Progressive is faster (60+ frames per second) while interlaced can only display every other pixel line in one pass, then it does a second pass and fills in the pixels it didn't do the first time resulting in 30 frames per second. 1080P is the highest and fastest television resolution available right now. "No" ghosting, "picture tearing", etc because of the high frame rate. Purchase a television that supports it now and all of your devices will soon support it too. Eventually digital television may support that high resolution as well. Most cable services, Dish Network, etc, can only support 1080i images at the moment. XBox 360, HD DVD players and more support that resolution now. There is a significant difference between the two resolutions. --Joel joelstad.net |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|