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Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

The Gadget Blog

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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