Agreed Brian. Back to video school for you, Wayne!
On Wed, Apr 09, 2008 at 06:06:37AM -0400, Brian Weeden wrote:
> I would completely disagree with you. While 1080i seems to have more
> pixels and is "brighter", I much prefer 720p for sports and anything
> involving lots of motion. I'm pretty sensitive to motion blur and I can
> certainly tell the difference. Always remember that one channels 720p (or
> 1080i) is not always the same as another channel's. A 1080i stream at twice
> the bitrate of a 720p stream will of course look much better.
>
> Now of course 1080p is a whole different story - them's the shiznit :)
>
> ---
> Brian
>
> On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 1:31 AM, Wayne Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > At 06:39 PM 4/7/2008, James Maki typed:
> >
> > > Higher is better, progressive (p) is better than interlaced
> > > (i). I don't know which is better, 720p or 1080i.
> > >
> >
> > IMNSHO 1080i is much better than 720p. I'm bummed when I have to watch
> > 720p on my Samsung 1080i boob tube. It drives me nuts when they call 720p
> > HDTV but many broadcast networks call it as such. You can get most if not
> > all your video questions about the video or hardware answered at
> > http://www.videohelp.com/ . I wouldn't buy a set that does less than
> > 1080i. What makes me laugh is that Walmart says they're the HDTV leader &
> > sell the same brand as other places but you'll be hard pressed to find many
> > sets at 1080i or 1080p sets. Gee, I think the model of the set makes a
> > slight difference but you can't tell some people anything. My brother bought
> > a Sony camcorder thinking it would be as good as mine because I have one yet
> > when he found out that his would only do mono audio he was bummed because
> > mine does stereo.
> >
> >
> > ----------+----------
> > Wayne D. Johnson
> > Ashland, OH, USA 44805
> > <http://users.zoominternet.net/~wdjvmj/<http://users.zoominternet.net/%7Ewdjvmj/>>
> >
> >
--
Bryan G. Seitz