turboman808
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For the record I doubt anyone can really tell the difference between 1080i and 1080p. My set upconverts to 1080p anyways.
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For the record I doubt anyone can really tell the difference between 1080i and 1080p. My set upconverts to 1080p anyways.
So in that light why the hell we are buying 1080p Blue Ray players? If inverse telecine is working then we only need 1080i .
It depends. Many HD video cameras are still 1080i, but things are changing. 1080p 30fps isn't uncommon anymore.Do they shoot TV programs nowadays with 1080i/1080p cameras?
Film doesn't have unlimited resolution, but yes many movies are still shot in film, though that's also changing. For example, Sony built George Lucas a bunch of custom 24 fps progressive digital video cameras for Episode II. Episode I was shot on film, and then digitally scanned for the special effects people to work on them. The scanning process took so much time and effort that he decided to shoot digitally to avoid the scanning.Are movies still shot on film have almost unlimited resolution? (The film-grain being much smaller than any pixel currently.)
still, a fart sounds like a fart on DVD or Blu-Ray. I cant imagine it being that much more of a mind blowing experience. Seems like a high price to pay for such a miniscule reward, unlike the analog tv/vhs vs HD/DVD jump.
The answer to your question is planet earth in blu ray.
I cannnot tell the difference between DVD and blu-ray.
The easiest test I know is to try to identify individual faces in a crowd. It's much easier with BD than DVD.
Much of my library is still in VHS format. Going to a HD television would be a step in the wrong direction as far as picture quality goes. I have no reason to get a television with a higher resolution to make all my old media look even worse.