Re: The OT place for OGs to BS w/o BS.
Posted: May 6th, 2010, 8:30 am
there's a huge difference, NHL games in HD is pure winsplat wrote:Maybe I'm dense, but what difference does SD vs HD make with satellite signal strength?elambz wrote:but the fact that they tell us we HAVE to have it.
smuggling in some relatives?CivicBeater wrote:Good morning from Miami. On the way to Key west here in about 10 minutes. Woot Woot!
Sometimes all of that extra definition looks weird for actual films, it seems awkward at times. I'm sure it just takes getting used to. I think it looks awesome for sports/anything originally shot on video or animated films. I have yet to watch footage out of my 5d on a 1080p TV, I'm curious of that level of awesome.tartje wrote:After you've watched Blu-Ray, DVD just doesn't cut it anymore.
Does bug me when people buy all-singing, all-dancing TVs and then have crappy cables and signals going into them, then complaining that it looks horrible and they thought HD TVs were supposed to be good.
Yeah i have this problem with high-refresh TVs too, movies look totally fake during certain scenes. It takes me right out of the movie.elambz wrote:I was watching Die Hard 2 with 240hz the other week and that shit was tripping me out until we turned it down off high setting. Anything other than sports looks crazy in 240hz.
We dropped it down to low and it looked way better. Got rid of the fakeness and just made it look a little better IMO. I'm very happy with my plasma that doesn't have the image processors.cheezthis wrote:All of the Hz talk is really marketing and image processors that try to create film frames that do not exist. Hollywood films at 24 Hz (Europe is 25 Hz). We use 60 Hz, so 3:2 pulldown was the norm for N. America. Pioneer changed the trend when their plasmas would use 72 Hz (3x24) for an even frame reproduction. LCDs went 120 Hz (5x24), but had to add an extra piece of marketing/sales stuff. Turn the image processors off, or in case of a Samsung with 240 Hz, change it Custom and turn judder off.
Not what I was asking at all - we've had HD cable for years.jgirard wrote:there's a huge difference, NHL games in HD is pure winsplat wrote:Maybe I'm dense, but what difference does SD vs HD make with satellite signal strength?elambz wrote:but the fact that they tell us we HAVE to have it.
I've noticed that on the demo reels as well. For the first ten times I saw the "Speed" demo, I thought they were advertising a documentary about the making of "Speed."98spec022 wrote:Yeah i have this problem with high-refresh TVs too, movies look totally fake during certain scenes. It takes me right out of the movie.elambz wrote:I was watching Die Hard 2 with 240hz the other week and that shit was tripping me out until we turned it down off high setting. Anything other than sports looks crazy in 240hz.
Yep! My main tv is Pioneer plasma, and it's great. Bedroom has a Samsung 950 series, with the image processors off.elambz wrote:We dropped it down to low and it looked way better. Got rid of the fakeness and just made it look a little better IMO. I'm very happy with my plasma that doesn't have the image processors.cheezthis wrote:All of the Hz talk is really marketing and image processors that try to create film frames that do not exist. Hollywood films at 24 Hz (Europe is 25 Hz). We use 60 Hz, so 3:2 pulldown was the norm for N. America. Pioneer changed the trend when their plasmas would use 72 Hz (3x24) for an even frame reproduction. LCDs went 120 Hz (5x24), but had to add an extra piece of marketing/sales stuff. Turn the image processors off, or in case of a Samsung with 240 Hz, change it Custom and turn judder off.
Absolutely!!! You can actually follow the puck and see jersey numbers.jgirard wrote:NHL games in HD is pure win
oh ok, I thought you were asking if HD was that much better then SDsplat wrote:Not what I was asking at all - we've had HD cable for years.jgirard wrote:there's a huge difference, NHL games in HD is pure winsplat wrote:Maybe I'm dense, but what difference does SD vs HD make with satellite signal strength?elambz wrote:but the fact that they tell us we HAVE to have it.
Guy said DirectTV is forcing him to get an HD box vs a standard box "because of poor satellite reception." That's what I was asking - how that could make a difference.
Yup, this totally ruined Waynes World the last time I watched it. My current tv is circa May 2006 but Blu-Ray movies look awesome so I'm happy. I'm not paying for HD cable service so I don't have to worry about it. It was cool to learn about the image processor tricks though!98spec022 wrote: Yeah i have this problem with high-refresh TVs too, movies look totally fake during certain scenes. It takes me right out of the movie.