Kleegamefan said:I have seen Blu-ray video personally.....no way could you mistake it for DVD video.....no way...
Wait until you see it for yourself before making any snap judgements...
thorns said:Uh okay, yes it indeed it was a DVD comparison, for some reason I thought it was HD-DVD. But anyway, as you say, the difference shouldn't be in the colors, but in the amount of detail.. If you look at the two upclose the difference should be quite obvious I think.
thorns said:Uh okay, yes it indeed it was a DVD comparison, for some reason I thought it was HD-DVD. But anyway, as you say, the difference shouldn't be in the colors, but in the amount of detail.. If you look at the two upclose the difference should be quite obvious I think.
Vaandaviii said:In fact, both displays together in a same low res jpg pic should not show any difference...
blackadde said:the screens in that jpg are around ~170x97 pixels. 480p already completely saturates that resolution, when you downsample to such a small scale, much of the the original information (eg. the resolution difference between SD and HD) is lost.
blackadde said:the samples are different but the image is almost indentical because it's downsampled ...
the 1080p grid -> 170x97 grid is almost identical to the 480p grid -> 170x97 grid because the denser pixels are averaged by the camera's ccd.
I'm sure they could... but are you willing to pay for itblindrocket said:Kill Bill Volume 1 on Blu Ray? Sounds sweet! But wait, 25-50 GB of storage and we can only get one of the damn movies on there?!
yoopoo said:Samsung potentially kills the dilemma on which player to buy, with a Blu-ray, HD DVD combo drive.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=28855
yoopoo said:Samsung potentially kills the dilemma on which player to buy, with a Blu-ray, HD DVD combo drive.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=28855
borghe said:I can't believe we are only two months from release, finished with CES, and STILL have no official word one way or the other on component HD outputs for either format..........
:\
I bet it's the studios pushing for this, b/c I can't see hardware manufacturers giving a rat's ass one way or another. If they force analog feeds to 480p, then both standards will suffer...in the short term. Whether or not they'll recover in the long-term is doubtful IMO. But in the meantime, I can see a lot of early-adopter HDTV fanbase getting seriously pissed about this.borghe said:so has something changed now? is there an official line by manufacturers saying that their hardware WILL support 720p/1080i over component and that it is up to the software now?
yoopoo said:Samsung potentially kills the dilemma on which player to buy, with a Blu-ray, HD DVD combo drive.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=28855
Pimpwerx said:BTW, would this preclude someone creating a cheap DAC box that can convert HDMI to composite without sacrificing signal quality? PEACE.
GCQuinton said:![]()
If the Xbox 360 one is this small, I'll seriously consider picking it up.
nice! that is smallGCQuinton said:![]()
If the Xbox 360 one is this small, I'll seriously consider picking it up.
Bebpo said:I didn't read the entire thread but did we get a release date for the 1st wave of Blu-Ray titles?
yoopoo said:Samsung potentially kills the dilemma on which player to buy, with a Blu-ray, HD DVD combo drive.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=28855
GCQuinton said:![]()
If the Xbox 360 one is this small, I'll seriously consider picking it up.
Borys said:That is indeed a sweet lil' gadget.
CES ATI didn't say much about the future of its Radeon Xpress chipset line at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, but it did indicate that the next generation of the product will support the HDMI interface.
As our photo of the relevant part of ATI's CES stand shows, the company also suggested the part will offer "reliability, stability and performance", though it's not clear whether that's what the HDMI connector will bring, or it means the product as a whole.
ATI is expected to ship its RS485 and RS490 chipsets shortly, if it hasn't begun to do so already. The RS485 is said to be a tweaked version of the already-shipping RS482. Both parts incorporate a Radeon X300 graphics core, but the RS485's is clocked higher than the RS482's. The RS485 is said to be pin-compatible with the RS482, ensuring a relatively smooth upgrade path for motherboard makers.
ATI is also believed to be gearing up to launch the RD580 - its CrossFire-supporting Radeon Xpress part that extends the current product line by adding support for twin 16x PCI Express slots. ®
"We strongly believe that Dell will start AMD-based system shipments as early as (the second half of 2006)," Santiago said in a report. He based his view on conversations with unnamed sources in the PC component supply industry, press reports indicating Asian designers are working on AMD-based systems for Dell, AMD inventory shortages suggesting Dell is purchasing the chips and other factors.
Kleegamefan said:I have seen Blu-ray video personally.....no way could you mistake it for DVD video.....no way...
Wait until you see it for yourself before making any snap judgements...
borghe said:so has something changed now? is there an official line by manufacturers saying that their hardware WILL support 720p/1080i over component and that it is up to the software now?
YES!!! Kick Intel right in the ass. While I don't really care about brand when buying a CPU (currently Intel), I fully support AMD. They're a good set of chips, and cheaper. Allying with Dell could land them the big leg up they've been looking for. PEACE.Deg said:Analyst: Dell likely to adopt AMD chips in 2006
http://news.com.com/Analyst+Dell+li...ps+in+2006/2100-1006_3-6025185.html?tag=st_lh
Pimpwerx said:EDIT: Are BD movies labeled with the supported resolutions? I would want to buy only 1080p copies...and only good ones.
Guy LeDouche said:Haha. "the higher definition experience"
nice dig to HDDVD
Yeah, but the results ofgofreak said:In calculating that average, though, the result will be different given that you're averaging more, different values for 1080p than 480p, no?