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2007-11-28 01:23:48 · 3 answers · asked by la vérité qui dérange 2 in Consumer Electronics TVs

3 answers

Its hard to say for sure. Normally a TV wouldn't have an HDMI port unless it was HD capable. HDMI (high definition media interface.) So would probably say your TV is HD. Now whether it has a built in HD tuner for over the air HD channels I wouldn't be able to say. Which is the difference between HDTV and HD ready. "Full HD" is a term that retail has placed on the resolution of 1080p. High definition resolution is descibed as 720p or 1080i. Retail tags 1080p as "Full HD" I guess it helps them sells the product more. After all 1080p resolution TV normally cost about $500 more than 720p or 1080i resolution TV's. For the average non TV junky user that doesn't really understand all this technology 720p or 1080i resolutions are more than adaquate.

Hope this was helpful

2007-11-28 01:44:03 · answer #1 · answered by averagegolfer3 3 · 0 2

These are different things.

"HD Ready" means it does not have a TUNER for an antenna.

HDMI input means it can accept signals from a HD cable box (which has a tuner) or a HD-DVD/BluRay/Ps3/etc.

2007-11-28 17:24:38 · answer #2 · answered by Grumpy Mac 7 · 0 2

its an hd tv

2007-11-28 09:28:00 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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