Any set under 32" is not going to be able to do hd any justice, and you really need 40"+ to get the most from it.
Any set under 32" is not going to be able to do hd any justice, and you really need 40"+ to get the most from it.
For Modern Day media yes HD is important for me otherwise it looks poo poo on the old Flat screen. But give me an SD CRT TV any day over a HDTV for Retro Gaming.
Yeah they do! My wife can even see the difference between DVD and Blu Ray on our TV and that's coming from someone who wonders why I needed to "upgrade" my cute PS2 to the massive and noisy PS3 (Phat model which has since died) I showed her the awesome GFX of the PS3 (Motorstorm was my first game) she was all "I don't see the difference". I was WELL miffed I tell thee!
It must be down to what you perceive as important.
Most things we watch are SD on my 42" plasma. But it looks absolutely fine to me. I do enjoy gaming and movies in HD though when I get the chance, but TBH it makes no difference to me whatsoever, I won't go out of my way to watch something in HD, plus I'm not paying Sky extra for the same content just at a "better" quality.
HD is all well and good, and since I recently invested in a decent HDTV, I like to be able to take advantage of it, but realistically, an SD DVD has pretty decent image quality already, it's not really a huge deal either way.
HD is all well and good, and since I recently invested in a decent HDTV, I like to be able to take advantage of it, but realistically, an SD DVD has pretty decent image quality already, it's not really a huge deal either way.
Exactly.
As long as the source (aural / visual) is of sufficient detail to let the brain form a concise construct, all's fine. The mind may actually well disregard any extra detail if it finds it to be a prolonged distraction factor (the mind can process that much detail in a given time frame, after all).
Not necessarily saying we've reached our mental limits with SD or HD or EHD (Even Higher Definition) or RHD (Ridiculously Higher Definition) but for sure the gains are not linear anymore.
I know a couple of people who say the difference between DVD and 1080p Blu-ray is hardly noticeable... I say they need glasses or a better quality TV :roll:.
Also, I think a lot depends on the source format. Remastering 1960s Doctor Who to DVD was a worthwhile exercise, but there's no point in attempting to make it HD!
You've not seen the African Queen on Blu then?
It's like Father Goose with the fun removed, but it's got Humphrey Bogart in it so it's highly acclaimed.You've not seen the African Queen on Blu then?
Can't say I've ever even heard of it...
there's an incredible difference between cinematic film even from the 20s or 30s and things originally recorded on tape for tv broadcast however......