Ten Myths of HDTV. Debunked

May 26, 2007 by colbert low  
Filed under HDTV, Home Entertainment

HDTV

If you have any doubts about HDTV, you’d probably need to take a good view on this article. I found out that there is no reason not to read this article as almost everyone of us has a TV in the house and soon everyone will have a HDTV except the Eskimos.

There are 10 key points that we need to take note of this HDTV term:

1. You need a cable or satellite TV subscription to watch HDTV programs.
2. You can buy a flat-panel HDTV with 1080i resolution.
3, HD video can’t be recorded to regular DVDs.
4. A 1080pixel TV is always better than a 720p TV.
5. An HDTV set automatically converts all programs it receives to HDTV.
6. All flat-panel televisions are high-definition.
7. To get the best-quality HD, you need expensive HDMI cables.
8. HDTV means consistent picture quality.
9. All 1080p HDTVs accept 1080p input signals.

And lastly Blu-ray and HD-DVD discs always offer the highest possible resolution. So I now know that HDTV is not rocket science and getting through the SATs is a tougher job.

Ten Myths of HDTV. Debunked source

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Comments

One Response to “Ten Myths of HDTV. Debunked”
  1. RealHDTV says:

    The ten point criteria looks simple. More information about HDTVs are encouraged and also about the latest 3-D HDTV from Philips.Nice post mate.

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