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Blind as a Brit

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On my 40" TV I am hard pressed to see the difference between blu and upconverted dvd. On my projector screen (100") the difference is very noticable. I assume most Brits then have TVs that are 40" or smaller.

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As a Brit, I think it might be a combination of things.

Firstly, we generally have smaller houses and apparently now have the smallest new house builds in Europe. So although new TVs sold over here are much larger than they have been in the past, on average they are likely to be smaller than in say the US, in order to not swamp the living space. Also, smaller rooms mean smaller viewing distances, so the need for larger screens will be less.

Secondly, we use PAL on this side of the pond, so our DVDs are (slightly) higher resolution to NTSC anyway (576 lines compared to 480).

The combination of smaller screens, higher resolution DVDs and good upscalers in modern TVs/DVD players make the move to Blu-ray less compelling, especially to the average man in the street who probably isn't that bothered about high definition anyway.

Personally, we still use an old 14" portable TV that must be at least 15 years old for most TV normal viewing (news and the like). For that sort of content, the screen size doesn't really matter to us; it's normally treated as something on in the background.

However, for "proper" film nights, we use a projector on to a 2m wide screen with 5.1 sound, usually fed by Blu-ray content. Even with this setup, a well upscaled DVD--although definitely inferior to Blu-ray--is very watchable. Once the film starts, I'm concentrating on the story rather than noticing how many pixels I'm potentially missing.

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