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 Posted by Lincoln Spector on 12/04/06 17:01 
"Anim8rFSK" <ANIM8Rfsk@cox.net> wrote in message  
news:ANIM8Rfsk-86E8FD.23574303122006@news.west.cox.net... 
> In article <YYLch.2062$Ga1.187@newssvr12.news.prodigy.net>, 
> "Lincoln Spector" <notmyreal@address.com> wrote: 
> 
>> "Howard Brazee" <howard@brazee.net> wrote in message 
>> news:ple4n2hh6kavbcjetmgecq0o5oblfkga2p@4ax.com... 
>> > 
>> > On Fri, 01 Dec 2006 21:35:43 -0800, Walter Traprock 
>> > <wetraprock@hotmail.com> wrote: 
>> > 
>> >>Folks, you should know, there's HDTV in standard aspect ratio! 
>> >> 
>> >>There's no need for the distortion-vision of widescreen TVs! 
>> >>There's no need for bright gray bars to "warn" you that you're 
>> >>watching material in the "wrong" aspect ratio. 
>> > 
>> > But for some reason when you watch regular TV shows in HDTVs at 
>> > restaurants and stores, it's almost always distorted. 
>> That's because most people, including those running the restaurants and 
>> stores, don't know what they're doing. 
>> 
>> When my TV was delivered, the delivery guys helped me set it up. One of  
>> the 
>> first things I did, once everything was plugged in, was to set the  
>> default 
>> for all four inputs to "Normal" (4x3). This shocked the delivery guys.  
>> They 
>> felt they had to explain to me that I just bought a widescreen TV and  
>> should 
>> be watching everything in widescreen. 
>> 
>> Frankly, I love the fact that when I put in an anamorphic DVD and start 
>> playing the movie, the image gets wider. It's like the end of the  
>> prologue 
>> in This is Cinerama. THAT's what a widescreen TV should do. 
>> 
>> Lincoln 
> 
> Okay, I'm shopping right now for HD tvs.  I take it your set somehow 
> senses the DVD anamorphic signal? 
If everything is configured correctly (no guarantee of that, of course),  
that's pretty standard. 
--  
 
 
Lincoln Spector 
Journalist, Columnist, Humorist 
lincoln@thelinkinspector.com 
www.thelinkinspector.com
 
  
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