If you want, you can buy whenever you feel like it.
Pero or more less, by next decade (post-2010), you should already have at least one HDTV set.
If you want, you can buy whenever you feel like it.
Pero or more less, by next decade (post-2010), you should already have at least one HDTV set.
walang high definition pa pati dream satellite wala...tanong mo rin san gawa... tanong mo rin anong mga freebies...mahigpit din ang competition... mabilis ang turnover ng mga models kaya hindi ka makakapili kung antay ka ng antay...at least 120khz ata ang mga refresh rate ng bago...yon ang kunin mo...
Makano na bg tag-price to? Baka naman may discount pa o freebie. o 0% installment?
megahakot sale sa megatrade hall ngayon. great for HSBC card holders. avail of 0% interest up to 25 months. you might want to check out them HDTVs there![]()
i'm very torn about this 1080p thing. i have 3 tv's right now that can support 1080i (as well as 480 and 720) but none that support 1080p (they are still too expensive as monseratto says). i run xbox 360, DVD (not blu ray), and cable HDTV through these sets in 1080i mode.
imho, the difference in quality between 1080i and 1080p is not big enough to justify the price difference at the moment. there is a difference, but imho it is not that big, and even in 1080i mode HDTV is knock-your-socks-off gorgeous if you're coming from regular TV or DVD. considering that there are huge price differences between the 1080i and 1080p TV sets, DVD players, and DVD discs, i think i'm gonna wait before taking the 1080p plunge.
it would also be better to wait to see which format wins - Blu-ray or HD DVD, but i think Blu-ray is winning this one hands down.
so basically what i'm trying to say is that if you don't have to have the absolute best picture right now, or if you're going to upgrade in a few years anyway (like me), then the time to buy an HDTV is right now or very soon, because the prices are very reasonable, and you will still get years of enjoyment out of non next-generation tech :D
we have a Hitachi Plasma at home, i forgot how many inches. the picture is good esp in movies, but for tv? nah. i'll stick on mya 29inch sony.
The abenson guy discounted us to flat 100k where the original price is 140k something.
no joke empy, pero eto ang unang beses na nakita kong seryoso ang reply mo. :hihihi: ano diff ng 1080i at 1080p? yung samin 1080p na, most of the LCD's are 480p, ryt?
1080i vs. 1080p HDTV: should you care?
1. 1080p defined
1080p resolution--which equates to 1,920x1,080 pixels--is the latest HD Holy Grail. That's because 1080p monitors are theoretically capable of displaying every pixel of the highest-resolution HD broadcasts. On paper, they should offer more than twice the resolution of today's 1,280x720, or 720p, HDTVs, such as Samsung's HL-P5085W. Some companies, such as LG, refer to these super-high-res of sets as ultra-HD, while others prefer to substitute true or full for ultra.
2. Why 1080p is theoretically better than 1080i
1080i, the former king of the HDTV hill, actually boasts an identical 1,920x1,080 resolution but conveys the images in an interlaced format (the i in 1080i). In a tube-based television, otherwise known as a CRT, 1080i sources get "painted" on the screen sequentially: the odd-numbered lines of resolution appear on your screen first, followed by the even-numbered lines--all within 1/30 of a second. Progressive-scan formats such as 480p, 720p, and 1080p convey all of the lines of resolution sequentially in a single pass, which makes for a smoother, cleaner image, especially with sports and other motion-intensive content. As opposed to tubes, microdisplays (DLP, LCoS, and LCD rear-projection) and other fixed-pixel TVs, including plasma and LCD flat-panel, are inherently progressive in nature, so when the incoming source is interlaced, as 1080i is, they convert it to progressive scan for display.
Last edited by Monseratto; July 16th, 2007 at 08:08 AM.