Close

Member Login

Invalid username or password.
Incorrect Login. Please try again.

Not a member?

Sign up and join a community that's passionate about exploring the world of entertainment & technology.

Beating A Dead Horse: Why Test Standard Definition Anymore?

Comments

Write a comment
default_avatar.png

Geoff,

Yes, TV manufacturers are beating a dead horse. No argument there. Everyone I know who owns a flat panel is also using an HDMI connection between their DVD/BluRay players and using the players to upconvert DVDs.

That said, I'd still welcome the testing of of upconversion accuracy. I'm one of the few users who still have an S-VHS VCR and laserdisc player connected to my plasma set. The quality of these sources can subjectively closely approach DVD quality on a properly calibrated plasma. Don't get me wrong. I'm not a consumer who shuns newer formats. I happen to have a 7.1 surround setup and two different listening zones and I'm enjoying an Oppo BDP-83 BluRay player.

I've always welcomed new formats as another option rather than a complete substitute for older formats. After all, there are some movies I simply don't like enough to buy again. So I'm selfish and I'm welcoming the improvement in TV upconversion.

Len

picture-919-1320596939.png

I installed a TV just yesterday and all he was hooking up was the cable line to the TV. Not everyone is doing HD, It is almost like going from tape to CD. It is rare but some people still are not fully HD. www.unisenmedia.com

picture-695-1318659882.png

what about all the 720p content from devices like appleTV and a ton of online content is SD.

I wouldn't focus on SD scaling specifically but proper deinterlacing is something a lot of online content needs help with and a good scaler can hide the bad tele-cine conversions or at the very least make sure the rec.601 colors are mapped over to rec.709 properly.

and lets not forget that DVDs are the what a lot of parents use for their kids content so while may dvd players did upscaling and blu-ray players can also, many times the children's TV might not have a good dvd player let alone a Blu-ray but odds are it is a cheap 1366x768 screen and many times it wont have a HD cable or satalite box either.

I'd worry about SD handling until 4K content and displays are available at walmart, until then SD is relevant, and even more so if manufactures start to do a worse and worse job with it in favor of apps or 3D features because assuming SD is handled properly and being complacent about it wouldn't help consumers much.

It makes me think about how most receivers no longer have proper phono stages or good headphone amplification but now that LPs are gaining popularity again and so are headphones people cannot just assume a given receiver will be good for either uses

Post a Comment
(1500 Characters or less)
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
All submitted comments are subject to the license terms set forth in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use