|  | Posted by grant kinsley on 11/27/07 20:38 
On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 16:55:44 -0800, ChairmanOfTheBored<RUBored@crackasmile.org> wrote:
 
 >On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 22:11:18 +0000 (UTC), nospam.tv@none.com wrote:
 >
 >>Mike S. <retsuhcs@xinap.moc> wrote:
 >>
 >>> Most HDTV's that I've seen in public places are poorly adjusted; and
 >>> worse, usually displaying SD programming stretched to wide screen mode.
 >>> Perhaps this is what the OP is seeing. I have a brother in law who, for 2
 >>> years, has fed an HDTV set using an SD cable box using RF input; he
 >>> insists that "this ***IS*** HDTV".
 >>
 >>You cannot judge the quality of HDTV by looking at the sets in the
 >>store. Most of them are poorly calibrated and are not fed a HD signal
 >>to begin with.
 >
 >  Most FPDs are quite well calibrated right out of the box.
 
 Not,
 
 most are calibrated with too high a color temperature, and often with
 things like white and black levels adjusted well beyond optimal and
 sharpness usually adjusted to bursting halos.
 
 GK
 >>
 >>When the TV is reasonably calibrated, and connected to a HD source
 >>using a good connection (component/hdmi), the resulting picture should
 >>be noticibly better than DVD, especially the HD signal from those
 >>Saturday football games. ;)
 >>
 >>Since the OP is happy with a $50 21-inch TV, I doubt he's the kind
 >>that pays attention to picture quality, so he's not missing much.
 >
 > I doubt he has the aptitude to know what "picture quality" even is.
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