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Since your question is in the TV category, I assume HD means High Definition, not hard disc. HD formats are already standardized by the ATSC; however, this standard contains 18 standards (e.g. 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, all with different resolution levels). All HDTVs regardless of their display will receive and work with the most commonly used of these standards, namely 480i or 480p (640 x 480), 720p (1250 x 720) or 1080i (1920 x 1080). Although 1080p is not used by TV broadcasters at present, it is becoming more common as display devices, especially LCD and DLP. In these sets, 1080i is internally converted to 1080p, and so far only a few accept 1080p as an input signal. This is changing, as the new HD DVD players are expected to output 1080p in the future, and some video game systems already offer 1080p outputs. So I believe in the future, 1080p will be the ultimate standard, even if TV broadcasting stays with 1080i.

2006-07-10 08:44:09 · answer #1 · answered by gp4rts 7 · 4 1

Some form of UFS will still be around in 10 years. I think UFS2 is the most common in UNIX right now.

2006-07-10 11:50:56 · answer #2 · answered by pottymouth2 2 · 0 0

NFTS will remain the standard I belive...

Terrabyte Flash hard drives formatted in NFTS

2006-07-10 12:03:16 · answer #3 · answered by gravvyboat 2 · 0 0

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