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2006-07-13 18:00:10 · 5 answers · asked by rudy 2 1 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

5 answers

It refers to the number of horizontal lines of resolution and whether there are interlaced (i) or progressive (p). Interlaced means it paints every other line for each frame (all odd, then all even, then all odd, etc). That is like current TV NTSC standards. Progressive is when every line is painted in every frame. This is like computer screens.

2006-07-13 18:03:14 · answer #1 · answered by djbreslin 2 · 0 0

It stands for resolution specifications of the picture what you see for example you check this
Resolution: 1080i/1080P, 720i/720P, 580i/580P, 480i/480P
Component Type: 0.53" DMD Chip™ by Texas Instruments. 6 Segment 5x Colour Wheel, Sealed Optics, Intelligent Compression
Aspect Ratio: 16:9, 4:3 (Switchable)
Resolution: 854 x 480 Pixels (409,920)
Computer systems: XGA/SVGA Mac 19"/16" (in Intelligent Compression), VGA, Mac 13"
Video systems: NTSC / NTSC 4.43 / PAL / PAL (60Hz) / PAL-M / PAL-N / SECAM
Lamp: 275W (3000 hours in Eco mode) - User Replaceable
Lens: 1:1.5 Manual Zoom & Focus
Screen Size: 200" Diagonal (Max); 100" picture from 4.35 - 5.24 m.
Contrast ratio: 2000:1
Brightness: 1000 ANSI Lumens
Input Terminals: Composite (RCA), S-Video (4-pin DIN), Component x 2, PC RGB, and Computer (RS-232)

Audio Amplifier: 2W mono
Remote control: Backlit IR-Remote control
Additional features: Vertical keystone correction, Built-in Line doubler, Gamma correction, Colour temperature adjustment.
Power source: 100-240V AC, 50/60Hz (Multi-Voltage) / 285W (standby 6W)
Dimensions : 315 x 280 x 109 mm w x d x h
Fan Noise: 34 dB
Weight: 3.9 kg

2006-07-13 18:06:35 · answer #2 · answered by vankayalarakesh 3 · 0 0

DVD players with HDMI connectors can "upconvert" the image to HD standards, which are 1080i or 720p. You should be aware, however, that internally in the DVD player everything starts at 480i. So, even if these formats are high definition formats, the DVDs are still standard definition. Reports are, however that even standard definition DVDs look better when upconverted, even though they are not HD. DVD players that do provide true HD images are just becoming available.

2006-07-13 19:22:15 · answer #3 · answered by gp4rts 7 · 0 0

It refers to the resolution it can play them back at, 1080 being the best, but it really depends on your TVs capabilities and the connection, without component (red,green,blue wires) you won't get any better picture then a normal DVD.

2006-07-13 18:05:16 · answer #4 · answered by Dave O 2 · 0 0

size-width-height and there should be a frame rate

2006-07-13 18:04:05 · answer #5 · answered by Josh H 2 · 0 0

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