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[QUOTE="bayern91"]How many times do we go over this ?720p is not 1440i. Where do you people get this nonsense? sarcasm maybe?
But anyways, 720P = 1440i whereas 1080i = only 540P.....
Do the math, :wink:
ramey70
I know a 1080i would cost me too much. *I'm 17.*$700-800 for a 32".
How much is the cheapest-yet still good 720p cost me? Please answer.
Symphonycometh
[QUOTE="Symphonycometh"]I know a 1080i would cost me too much. *I'm 17.*$700-800 for a 32".
How much is the cheapest-yet still good 720p cost me? Please answer.
eclipsed4utoo
Ok, I'm sort of having the same dilemma but instead of games it's for movies. My LCD TV's native resolution is 1366 x 768 (whatever that is.) I would like to know if I should play my blu-ray movies in 1080i or 720p. I play my games in 720p thought for Blu-Ray movies (which I don't own yet) what resolution should I display it in? gamer2damaxthe PS3 will only output blu-ray movies at 1080i or 1080p. So you are going to have to let your TV do the work if you want it to be 720p.
[QUOTE="bayern91"]How many times do we go over this ?720p is not 1440i. Where do you people get this nonsense? 720p, displays 720 scan lines fully 60 times a second. The other, imaginary 1440i, would display 1440 scan lines fully 30 times a second, or 60 half frames a second. The scanning frequency to do either of those types of image would be the same.
But anyways, 720P = 1440i whereas 1080i = only 540P.....
Do the math, :wink:
ramey70
[QUOTE="ramey70"][QUOTE="bayern91"]How many times do we go over this ?720p is not 1440i. Where do you people get this nonsense? 720p, displays 720 scan lines fully 60 times a second. The other, imaginary 1440i, would display 1440 scan lines fully 30 times a second, or 60 half frames a second. The scanning frequency to do either of those types of image would be the same. Whoa, i thought you were joking but your serious. Ramey was right your logic is complety flawed to the point of nonsense.
But anyways, 720P = 1440i whereas 1080i = only 540P.....
Do the math, :wink:
bayern91
[QUOTE="ramey70"][QUOTE="bayern91"]How many times do we go over this ?720p is not 1440i. Where do you people get this nonsense? 720p, displays 720 scan lines fully 60 times a second. The other, imaginary 1440i, would display 1440 scan lines fully 30 times a second, or 60 half frames a second. The scanning frequency to do either of those types of image would be the same. Yo Einstein The human eye clocks out at roughly 30 fps in terms of relative motion. Thats why films are shot at 24fps and video shot at 29.97fps. 720 lines at 60 hertz is different from 720 interlaced at 30 hertz. 1440i is 720lines interlaced at 30 hertz and requires a Qresolution display to be appreciated. 1080i is 540 lines interlaced at 30 hertz although it never fills every pixel on screen simultaneously the human eye cannot tell the difference. If you could view motion at 60 hertz then you'd be able to see in slow motion. 720p is not 1440i PERIOD
But anyways, 720P = 1440i whereas 1080i = only 540P.....
Do the math, :wink:
bayern91
From EzineArticles.com;
"To answer the question, it's important to understand the difference between 720p vs 1080i. A 720p signal is made up of 720 horizontal lines. Each frame is displayed in its entirety on-screen for 1/30th of a second. This is know as progressive scan (hence the 'p')The quality is like watching 30 photographic images a second on TV. A 1080i signal comprises 1080 horizontal lines but all the lines are not displayed on-screen simultaneously. Instead, they are interlaced (hence the 'i'), ie every other lines is displayed for 1/60th of a second and then the alternate lines are displayed for 1/60th of a second. So, the frame rate is still 30 frames per second, but each frame is split into two fields, which your brain then puts together subconsciously.
Most of the time interlacing works fine, but for fast moving images, such as sports like baseball and hockey it can cause problems which manifest themselves as a 'stepping' effect on-screen. Progressive scan signals don't have this problem and so are better suited to sports."
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