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 Posted by Jay G. on 03/10/06 13:00 
On Fri, 10 Mar 2006 03:54:03 GMT, AZ Nomad wrote: 
 
> On Thu, 9 Mar 2006 20:49:27 -0600, Jay G. <"Jay "@tmbg.org> wrote: 
>>HD discs will have up to 5 times the resolution of a standard definition 
>>DVD.  The degree to which this increase in resolution is noticable depends 
>>on the size and quality of HDTV you have, as well as probably how good your 
>>eyesight is. 
>  
> Two to three times the resolution actually.  Resolution is the number of lines 
> per inch, the number of dots along one dimension.  A good improvement over  
> NTSC, but nowhere the resolution of film. 
 
Counting only the scan lines only works when you're comparing formats with 
the same horizontal resolution, like NTSC vs PAL.  However, HDTV formats 
have a higher horizontal resolution in addition to higher vertical 
resolution.  The numbers are: 
 
480 - 704x480 = 337920 pixels 
720 - 1280x720 = 921600 pixels 
1080 - 1920x1080 = 2073600 pixels 
 
So 720 is about 2.7 times the resolution of 480, while 1080 is about 6 
times the resolution of 480. 
 
> In 10 years, HDTV will be as much a joke as ISDN.  At least it's a step in the 
> right direction. 
 
Digital Television won't be foisted upon consumers until 2009.  After that 
point, there's still going to be a large transition period where a good 
number of people are going to stick with their old analog sets and a 
digital signal converter.  The analog shutoff doesn't even affect cable 
companies, which may continue to transmit analog signals for a while after 
that.  Not to mention that most LCD "HDTV" sets nowadays are only 720p.  So 
in 10 years time we're going to see HDTV *just* becoming the mainstream 
standard.  And it took over 40 years for color NTSC to be replaced by 
anything else. 
 
-Jay
 
  
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