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2006-12-25 15:39:00 · 6 answers · asked by Korn 2 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

Thats what im asking dude. I just accidently said 780 instead of 720.

2006-12-25 19:12:19 · update #1

6 answers

Up to a 37" screen, there isn't an advantage to 1080p; above that there is, and the bigger the screen the more important the higher resolution becomes. It also depends on how close you sit. If the screen is large enough, or you sit close enough to see (even faintly) the pixels, then the higher resolution (1080p) will be better. Although there are very few 1080p sources (broadcast is 1080i or 720p only), the set "deinterlaces" 1080i and actually displays 1080p. The result is not as good as true 1080p source, but can be quite good.

2006-12-26 12:46:39 · answer #1 · answered by gp4rts 7 · 0 0

I think the question should be, "Where would I find a 780P picture source?"
This is a TV spec that is used to sell TVs. It has no relation at all to real life. There are no 780P sources unless you were to produce one with a computer.
So, in reality, although you have a screen that's capable of 780 progressive horizontal lines, the only actual picture it could show is a 480P picture from a progressive scanning DVD player.
An HDTV signal of 1080i or 1080P is to much for this TV to handle.
So yes, there is a huge difference in what the TVs can actually display.

2006-12-25 18:56:15 · answer #2 · answered by Garry H 3 · 0 0

Currently, there aren't many sources that output true in true 1080p. Most are either 720p or 1080i. A 1080p tv may still look slightly better than a 720p tv when displaying HD broadcast channels... but you won't notice a huge difference unless you get something that displays in true 1080p (like Blu-ray or PS3). Also, make sure your tv will handle a 1080p input. Some of the early 1080p tv's will only output 1080p, but cannot handle 1080p input. Don't ask me why they did that, but they did.

2006-12-26 07:38:32 · answer #3 · answered by garddog32 2 · 0 0

Hmmm...... enable me positioned it this way. If the alternative is between an even bigger television at 720p vs. a smaller television at 1080p, and that they seem to be a similar value, i could %. the 720p. Why? this is larger! i could get excitement from the bigness extra then the extra suitable sharpness i could get from 1080p. as an occasion. My brother has a fifty 8" 720p plasma. looks plenty good to me while enjoying DVDs or observing HDTV. despite the fact that, considering that this is on your mattress room a 50" will possibly no longer additionally be sensible. this is pretty large for a mattress room. on your case, i could in all probability decide for to pass with the smaller 40 two" 1080p liquid crystal demonstrate.

2016-11-23 17:19:51 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It's 720p vs 1080p.

Huge difference between 720p and 1080p (basically 720 vertical lines on display at the same time vs. 1080 vertical lines on display at the same time). At least I think so. With 1080, movies seem so much clearer and so much more detailed. As a matter of fact, if the TV is huge enough, you can see the imperfections in actors faces.

2006-12-25 18:03:04 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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2006-12-25 15:49:17 · answer #6 · answered by tee 2 · 0 0

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