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I got an HDTV. In the HDMI color Space it gives me the option to set it to either RGB, YCbCr(4:4:4), and YCbCr(4:2:2). What is the difference and which should I select?

2006-10-27 12:47:57 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics TVs

3 answers

I think RGB is for component cables which stands for: Red, Green, and Blue. which gives you the best video picture as oppose to the composite cables the red, white, yellow one. The HDMI is the ultimate picture resolution which give you the audio and video with one cable. As for as the YCbCr check out the attached link.

2006-10-27 13:08:11 · answer #1 · answered by Glacier 2 · 0 0

If you are using a digital display (LCD, DLP, Plasma) or (DLP/LCD Projection) you probably should start with YCbCr sampling since this is the color space used for MPEG compression found in today's DVDs. Of course, you can always try all three and see which looks better. Check out this link: (http://www.answers.com/topic/ycbcr-sampling) explaining the 4:4:4 and 4:2:2 sampling.

2006-10-27 20:09:13 · answer #2 · answered by Martin W 2 · 0 0

Your color encoding should match the source. If it is MPEG-2 (ATSC, DVD, etc) that is 4:2:2: RGB is analog.

2006-10-28 02:44:03 · answer #3 · answered by gp4rts 7 · 0 0

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