Z's Link showed that at least 4 different manufacturers have 32" 1080p
sets. Now all they have to do now is come down in price.
Thanks for the explanation, Greg. I thought that they would have to
reformat for the lower resolution, but there always was a chance for
manuf to leave you in the cold....
Steve
Greg Sevart wrote:
Same thing they do with a 720p (1280x720) signal. Most sets that are
advertised as 720p are actually a funky resolution like 1366x768, so they
have to scale the signal to actually output to the panel's resolution.
Any input that isn't the TV's native resolution has to be scaled or
otherwise converted--that includes all 1080i signals, since it must be
de-interlaced to a progressive format (and potentially scaled) to actually
play on the set.
And, as Zulfiqar already mentioned, the 1920x1080 panel resolution is
finding its way into sub-37" sets now too.
Greg
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:hardware-
[email protected]] On Behalf Of Steve Tomporowski
Sent: Sunday, September 27, 2009 8:19 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [H] advise
Since we're on this subject....All TV's below 37" are 720. What does
one of those TV's do when fed with a 1080 signal? Or does it just not
display? I've wondered about that since I would think that with the
mixtures of 1080/720 stations, they'd want everything to display
everything....or am I mistake because that makes sense?
Steve
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