As the quality of digital TV improves with technology such as 1080p, the differences are more difficult to discern.
SlideshowPity the TV owner whose tube finally blows after 20 years: When she goes into the electronics superstore to replace the set, she’ll be faced with a new generation of shapes and sizes, not to mention a bewildering range of technologies, from plasma to LCD to DLP and SXRD. She’ll see terms that didn’t exist in the analog age, such as HDMI, response time and Full HD. And she’ll gape at a wall of TVs, feeling nothing short of overwhelmed.
She isn’t the only one, of course. Even veteran HDTV owners are perplexed by the numbers and specs coming from zealous marketers. “I feel bad for the consumer,” says Bill Whalen, director of product development for Hitachi. “The marketing machines [cite an array of features and specifications to] try to get some advantage, and unfortunately, that’s to the detriment of consumers, who are confused over what they’re actually getting.”
The latest must-have feature is 1080p. Companies including Sony, Samsung, Pioneer and Sharp use the term “Full HD” to describe TVs with resolutions of 1920 x 1080. “Progressive,” or “p,” refers to the way an image is produced on the screen. A progressive image is delivered in one fell swoop in 1/60th of a second. An interlaced image (as in 1080i) is painted as every other line each 1/30th of a second.
Hitachi uses the term “Full HD” to refer to a resolution of 1920 x 1080, regardless of whether the TV displays the image in interlaced or progressive mode. Whalen notes that most content viewers see what comes to them in the 1080i format and that no broadcast content is available in 1080p. Of the major networks, CBS and NBC broadcast using a 1080i signal, as do HBO and Showtime. ABC, Fox and ESPN broadcast in 720p. Fortunately, all HDTVs convert the various signals to the native scanning format of the television, so you don’t have to worry about the different ways they are broadcast.
The 720p networks chose the progressive format because it does a better job at reproducing motion video for sports, as each picture is painted in one pass. On the other hand, 1080i is better suited to film reproduction, where you want more detail. The best of both worlds? You guessed it: 1080p, which offers the motion benefit of 720p and the resolution benefit of 1080i—roughly 2 million pixels versus 900,000.
So if you took the HDTV plunge early on, is your 1024 x 768 TV (often referred to as 720p) dangerously close to being obsolete? Not at all, says Scott Ramirez, vice president of marketing at Toshiba America. “720p and 1080p are both HD,” he notes. “As always in our industry, you have good, better and best, and you always have the next new thing.” Ramirez says 720p is still a great picture, and people love it, “but now there are things coming out that are even better, and 1080p is one of those.”
Owners of 720p TVs can rest assured that their pictures are still going to look very good,” says Tony Favia, senior product manager of large-screen LCD TVs for Sharp Electronics. “They’re just not going to look as good as they would on a 1080p set. When the time comes to upgrade to a bigger set, they’ll want to strongly think about 1080p, since that’s the direction all manufacturers are headed toward today.”
A 1080p TV is a good choice for larger screen sizes. If you sit too close to a 720p TV, you’ll see the pixel structure of the display, which distracts from the experience. When shopping for TVs, audition models at the distance you would watch from at home. “If you were going to compare a 1080p TV with a 720p in a store, in most cases you’d be looking at a set very close up and not at a typical viewing distance,” says Favia. “When you’re at home, three times the diagonal of the TV is a good viewing distance.”
The shift to 1080p has given TV makers a tiered pricing strategy to help offset the loss of the lower-resolution enhanced definition (ED) format, which has largely disappeared from the market. Pricing free falls have been a boon for consumers, who have reaped the benefits of as much as a 50 percent price drop from one year to the next.
This new technolgy from sony sounds like what i read in an article in nov..06. The article was saying a new technology would be released in the retail stores this nov..07 They were advising not to buy a new HDTV untill about nov..07 if you wanted a rock bottom deal. This technolgy went way futher than tv’s. They predicted huge sales on tv’s for christmas 06 and would get bigger sales as the year went along as the stroes are empting thier enventory. I believe we have been seeing this as i have been seeing email offers 75% off of 6’7'8 months ago. They claimed at that time in 06 thier was already 1000’s of tv’s in warehouses waiting for the reduction of inventory and thier would be a big press release in Nov.07 revealing this technolgy and at the same time already shipped the product for it to be put out on the stores shelves. They predicted you should beable in Nov 07 a very good 1080p lcd for $1000 50” tv’s. I believe we will be seeing this shortly. For an example geeks.com sent me an email for a 750gb 16mb 7200rpm hard drive for 149.99.. Just how long ago was this same hard drive 400+.. Not long.. I look forward to the furture of Home Theaters.. Take Care… Miles
Concise and informative article. I am impressed how you were able to condense so much information. I talk about these issues on a daily basis as I am a sales specialist (home theater) at Circuit City and to be honest I wish every customer that walked into the store would read your article first. Only a couple of issues were left out that i hope you could have elaborated more on, such as the difference in technologies of DLP, plasmas and LCD. Also you could have incorporated the prototype Sony OLED that currently was displayed in Las Vegas, and how the contrast ratio is greater than a 1000000 to 1 (not a misprint). This organic light emitting diode technology is supposed to be a giant leap in terms of technology as it surpasses the picture in detail on anything in the market today not to mention it is only 3 ml thick. Amazing isn’t, wonderful article by the way looking forward towards your next.
This was a good article. One thing that is certain is these issues will continue to be issues. No one wants to find out that they have chosen and committed themselves to the next betamax! I think there are a lot of people still waiting for the bandwagon to jump onto.
One aspect of the 1080p that I feel was not covered is a lot on manufactures, offer up-converting A/V units that will take a analog signal and up-convert it to the 1080p, taking advantage of the full-HD TV display you just purchased, When you run your broadcast signal through these amplifiers it too and be converted to this new spec.
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I intend buying samsung 1080p lcd. is it worth now cause the set will be with me for the next five years or so. by this time hdtv signals will be common. what should i do. any comments