Razorguns said:i got 52" lcd for just over $1g's. I love the quality. Toshiba. kicks ass.
r
75th said:And Costco doesnt have those prices for 1080p.
75th said:1080p, foo. Need that shiznit with the Blu Ray.
Plus itll be good for the economy.
75th said:http://catalog2.panasonic.com/webap...195663&catGroupId=14624&surfModel=TH-50PF10UK
A client of mine owns a electronics business, mainly providing displays to companies. He said he would be able to get me this bad boy for about $1,700.
Im tempted mainly because I just got a Blu-Ray player, and although it looks good on my 32" LCD, Im sure itll look orgasmic on this.
I could tone it down and get a 42" of this model for about $1,000.
Make up my mind, folks.
Razorguns said:it's 1080p. the p comes from the br player. ntsc tv comes in 1080i. but there is alnmost no difference to the human eye. Check it out at best buy. There's a major complex formula that explains how 1080p on br is pretty much 1080i compressed and changed via a complex algorithm. Someone posted it on some forum someplace. I forget the link. Not like I could understand it.
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Razorguns said:it's 1080p. the p comes from the br player. ntsc tv comes in 1080i. but there is alnmost no difference to the human eye. Check it out at best buy. There's a major complex formula that explains how 1080p on br is pretty much 1080i compressed and changed via a complex algorithm. Someone posted it on some forum someplace. I forget the link. Not like I could understand it.
r
Razorguns said:http://mainehdtv.blogspot.com/2007/12/whats-difference-between-1080i-and.html
http://www.engadgethd.com/2006/12/09/1080p-charted-viewing-distance-to-screen-size/
plus more.
reading that stuff gives me a headache. if u can understand all that - i bow to you.
r
1080p means 1080 pixels per inch in a “progressive” scan format. 1080i means the same pixels in “interlaced” format. Progressive scan broadcasting offers a higher quality picture so a 720p broadcast is similar to a 1080i broadcast. I’m not going to get into the technical aspect of this but I can tell you that unless you have better than 20/20 vision and you are sitting within 2 feet of your television screen, you don’t even have the chance of noticing the difference between 1080i versus 1080p, or 1080i versus 720p.
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