What Gamers Need To Know About Buying an HD TV 138
The excellent games coverage at the San Jose Mercury News site offers up a gamers buying guide for HD TVs. Dean Takahashi discusses the basics every HD purchaser should know, some technical issues with recent plasma and LCD advances in mind, and addresses the specific problems that gamers will face with their new purchases. From the article: "If you accidentally set your PS 3 for 1080p resolution, when the TV can only support 720p, you get a black screen. The Westinghouse TV I used displayed a message that said 'invalid format.' To reset the PS3 to the standard AV format, you shut the PS3 off. Then you hold the PS3's power button down for about 10 seconds. It will reset to standard video. If you have the Nintendo Wii, you won't have to upgrade your standard/enhanced definition TV as the Wii's best resolution is 480p. It's thankfully simple, but you get a sixth of the pixels on screen as you do with a full HDTV with a PS3."
No mention of HDTV lag (Score:5, Informative)
This can be frustrating in action or rhythm games (Which is why Guitar Hero 2 has an option to compensate for it). I don't have an HDTV, so I'm not sure how bad it is but some google-fu should find plenty more on the subject.
Re:No mention of HDTV lag (Score:5, Funny)
"lucky shot n00b cuz if my tv wasnt lagging..."
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You'll soon be able to pick the ones with the slow image processors - they're the ones that are perceptibly behind the rest.
Of course, this doesn't show the fact that they're *all* behind a little bit, but it does help weed out the crap ones.
Stores don't help. (Score:5, Interesting)
At another one, everyone was crowded around the one "good looking" TV, because it was the only one displaying an HD image. All the other TVs had been tuned to an analog channel, and looked like crap by comparison.
Until the major-market stores get their act together, it's going to be very difficult to shop for or compare HDTVs in any meaningful way. I went out to look at them in person because I thought it was ridiculous to shop for a TV without going and judging the PQ of various models in person, but I left feeling that it would just be better to shop from specs -- any subjective evaluation would have been rendered meaningless by the poor setup and conditions in stores. (The solution would have been to go to a "real" home theater store, but since I'm probably not going to pay their prices (as much as I'd like to support an independent/local, and feel guilty about it) I've hesitated to visit any.)
Everything about HD is screwy right now. Manufacturers don't know what people want, so there are products out there that are either flat-out crappy or just mis-designed; stores aren't bothering to train their employees about how to explain or sell the new technology, making the job of a potential buyer even harder; not to mention that average people range seem to be ambivalent about the whole upgrade business. HDTV isn't like color, where once you saw it, you understood the change and could go out and buy one; it's an obvious upgrade when it's done right, but it can be a morass if it's not.
Re:Stores don't help. (Score:5, Insightful)
It does suck that they couldn't just run a 1080p signal to all of the 1080p TVs from one source. Really makes me worried that the new 1080p TVs are just too wrapped up in HDCP to be worth the extra expense. I'd rather have analog back if it means that we will actually be allowed to see a better picture, instead of being stuck with some unrealized capability of doing so.
Negotiate a license with the movie studio (Score:2)
One problem that the Circuit City sales person explained was that they didn't have a 1080p source for putting on all the 1080p HDTVs, because of the stupid copy restrictions which downgrade a signal to 720p when it is not hooked up through a unsplittable HDMI connection. So, they would have had to have each tv hooked up to a seperate 1080p video source and couldn't just split the signal from one player.
Either that or negotiate a license with the work's copyright owner to press splittable copies to be rented to each Circuit City store. The work displayed on the huge wall of TVs is being performed publicly anyway.
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It's not 1080p, it's HDTV in general. That's why I'm planning to hold off for another three years - if they aren't affordable by then, or if HDCP still isn't cracked, then they never will be.
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I ran into this very same dilemma (Future Shop in Canada, akin to Best Buy - and I believe owned by them). Here' s what I did - I took a Powerbook to the store with a DVD in it, along with the various video cables.
I knew that any HDTV I bought would have to hook up thru at least VGA and prefera
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One might think that you don't know what you're talking about from that statement. Let me debunk this a bit:
1. 1080i even at 60 fields/30 frames per second, IS a higher resolution than 720p at 60 frames per second. One can make arguments about the visual quality depending on content (e.g., the "sports is better in 720p" contention), but the data transferred via 1080i is still greater than that t
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*blinks*
Classic kneejerk reaction. You completely misunderstood what I was trying to say. I know what 1080p is (but gosh, thanks for the lesson.)
I didn't say it didn't exist. What I meant was, there is practically no content for that signal, and probably won't be very much for some time. Thats it. And your 2-year estimate is pretty funny. Its taken a decade just to get the paltry HD adoption that is
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within the next year or two, game consoles alone are going to drive HDTV sales more. there will be [guesstimating here] probably 40 million next generation consoles sold in the next
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This is a good point and I am optimistic as well - the only thing I might add is that the most popular new console is 480p only (the Wii), but who knows how that horse race will en
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It can lead to unfortunate misunderstandings when two linked technologies are rolled out simultaneously (and badly). Over thanksgiving I was trying to describe our broadcast HD MythTV setup with an LCD to a country uncle and part of it was explaining why LCDs don't _have_ to suck. Because all he'
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I may hopefully afford a new television in the next few years, and the absolute maximum price is 1,000 euros (anything higher is fucking stupid anyway). I've never had anything better than a 14" CRT.
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You need to remember that video games only use 1080i as a transmission mechanism. It's not encoded at 1080i (it's not encoded at anything - it's generated progressive content).
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Doesn't matter (Score:2)
And IF you have an LCD or Plasma TV (again, 90_% of HDTV owners), then it *ALWAYS* displays content progressively. Before it gets to the panel, it's
Headroom (Score:2)
It doesn't matter if your game is capable outputting 90 fps or 120fps of 300 fps.
Yes it does. If a game can draw 90 frames per second, then it has the headroom to draw a steady 60 frames per second, which is required for a game doing interlaced rendering.
And IF you have an LCD or Plasma TV (again, 90_% of HDTV owners)
I disagree. A lot of people who have complained publicly about the lack of upscaling from 720p to 1080i seem to have early adopter CRTs, not panels, and a lot of these CRTs are capable of only 480i, 480p, and 1080i. Rendering 60 frames per second at 540p and tilting the camera halfway down is a way to make a 1080i signal for the
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After running through the lag calibration thing, my screen was apparently about 30ms out of whack. In normal games, this wouldn't really make that much of a difference, but
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I'd have expected this issue to be the main focus of the article, since your average gamer is not going to have trouble figuring out the different resolution and connection options. How to determine which TVs have the least lag is not so trivial.
Resolution (Score:4, Insightful)
From the article:
Wow, this guy finally figured out what us PC gamers have known for about a decade now! Who'da thunk it?
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I know this goes against what some people will say but I would rather run a game at 800x600 with 8xAA and 8xAF then have the same game at 1280x1024 with no AA and AF.
Re:Resolution (Score:4, Insightful)
See, you've just proven my point: you consider 800x600 to be low resolution! For console gamers, this would be high resolution -- standard for them is 484 interlaced lines. When you start getting that low, it becomes really bad no matter how much anti-aliasing you use. For example, try playing Half-Life on the PS2 sometime. It sucks horribly, mostly due to the low resolution (the remainder of the sucking is due to the horrible controls).
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Until now, console games were designed for SD, so textures and images wouldn't have those artifacts unless you had a bad artist.
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The problem isn't the raw resolution per se but rather the resolution the game was designed to play at. I find it telling that you point to a port of a PC game as an example of poor quality of gaming on a television.
However, if it were all about nothing but raw resolution power, then there would be no discernable difference between playing the PS2 version of Half-Life on a television and playing the
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Still, there's a lot more PC gamers could learn about HDTV, including proper cables for converting DVI to HDMI, which brands support DVI standard and what resolutions just wont look good on HDTV. Heck, even some info on setting it to native res, much like standard LCD monitors, would have been handy.
All in all, I'd prefer an article like this be called "A Console Gamer's Guide to Buying an HDTV" since it
Are there more Xbox 360 or HTPC systems? (Score:2)
True, but in practice, it appears that the vast majority of HDTV gaming is done on a closed console. The three notable HDTV gaming platforms are PLAYSTATION 3, Xbox 360, and Home Theater PC. PS3 is still in public beta, so are there more Xbox 360 systems or HTPC systems in use?
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Even if there are good numbers on HTPCs, I wonder how many of them are used for gaming. Personally, I've enjoyed gaming on my 36" non-HDTV Mitsubishi for several years now, but I know a lot of other people just use their PCs to record TV, play DVDs or run movies off thei
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I've always believed the number of PC gamers using large-screen TVs would increase with HDTV penetration (easier to use and higher quality/resolution)
The problem is that publishers of A-list PC games still seem to be stuck in the mindset of first person shooters, real-time war sims, and online role playing games. All these genres seem to work better with a keyboard and mouse, which become awkward in a living room and are limited to one player per machine. There aren't too many HTPC games that can use multiple USB gamepads plugged into the front hub.
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Those are the only PC shooters that I know of that do.
"Hunter, Hunted" is a great older game for two-player versus or coop platform action, on one machine.
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The lack of split screen mutiplayer games is a bigger problem, but, hey, I never said the PC should replace consoles. It's just a heck of a lot of fun playing Doom3 on a big screen with 5.1 and no lights
Which platform? (Score:2)
Then which open platform, available to amateur developers looking to get hired and new studios looking to publish a first title, should replace consoles?
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BTW, check out Treadmarks at LDAgames.com. It's a great small-publisher game, though a little dated by this point. It's been one of my favorite for years.
TW
Westinghouse LVM-42W2 is great (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Westinghouse LVM-42W2 is great (Score:4, Informative)
Our office bought the LVM-42W2 for video conferencing over the summer. Since then, 4 of us have bought the exact same model. It's got tons of inputs (all the various analog ones, 1 VGA, 2 DVI, 1 HDMI). It can do 1080p. It is cheap - finding it for $1500 is not hard, I think. I haven't run into any quirks.
The difference between the Westinghouse and the $3000 Samsung is that the Samsung has lots of nice filters on it, whereas the Westinghouse only has the standard brightness/contrast/etc. Three points:
1) Your 1080p/1080i source doesn't need any expensive upconverting filter technologies.
2) You'll want a nicer up-converting image for DVD sources. This can be remedied by buying a nice $100 DVD player which does the up-conversion, instead of having the TV do it.
3) Unless you have lots of nice TVs at home already, you won't be able to tell the difference between the Westinghouse and a $3000 set once you get it in your living room. The only way to see that the $3000 set has a marginally better picture is to put them next to each other.
So, the extra $1500 in cost goes away once you take the set home, and in the worst case can be remedied by buying a nice DVD player (cost: $100).
I friggin' love my TV and, at $1500, my wife even let my buy it.
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What frame of existence do you live in that says $1500 for a TV is cheap?
When my current TV (27") dies and I can replace it for $300 I'll do it.
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That's just plain false. There's a human-noticeable loss of fidelity when you're at 15fps or when there's missing textures (blood spattering, etc). There's a signifigant amount of information loss that's pertinent to the game (FPS, RTS, not so much RPG). HDTV doesn't address anything remotely practical. I cannot ignore the fact that there's an improvement visually, but not an improvement that serves any specific need or gap. The difference in fidelity is not even noticeable to me
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strike
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If you're trying to evaluate contrast ratio, play Doom 3 instead.
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The article mentions that there are no 1080p games for xbox 360 at all, currently. That's probably why you don't notice any difference.
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Monitor, not TV (Score:2)
My subject is meant to inform folks that this is a monitor, not a TV, becuase it lacks tuners. Makes for a great price (I got mine on sale at Best Buy for $1500) if you don't need em, and I don't.
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What are the various options for external tuners, by the way? My parents are looking to replace their bedroom TV with an LCD panel, and it's ridiculous to pay either $270 for a crappy standard-def 20" panel or $800 for an HD one, when I could get an HD-resolution 20" computer monitor (with no tuner) for $300.
One silver lining for PC people (Score:4, Interesting)
NES lockout (Score:2)
compatability problems (never really had those with the NES)
You must not have tried to play a game published by Color Dreams, Wisdom Tree, or Camerica on a late-model NES. You must also not have tried to play a game published in one part of Europe on a console sold in another part of Europe.
The bright side of all this for PC gamers is that we should start seeing fewer games being hobbled because people try to design them for PCs and consoles simultaneously
Isn't the home theater PC gaming environment similar to that of a game console, minus the lockout?
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Last time I priced out a machine like the one you're talking about, it was closer to $2k - and that was without a monitor. Dell charges at least 50% more than what the parts would cost if you built the system yourself. For instance, you can save yourself a chunk of change right from the start by only putting in the minimum amount of RAM you can buy into your Dell, then going to Kingston or Crucial's websi
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2.66 GHz P4
1 Gig ram
Radeon 9800 Pro 128 Mb
80 Gig HD
15" Digital FP monitor
2.1 sound
$1050
People greatly exagerate the costs involved with a new dell.
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Athlon64 X2 or Core 2 Duo - $200
2GB RAM - $250 (RAM is pricey right now)
Asus motherboard ($80)
Some video card ($150)
120-200GB HD (hell, buy 2, $120)
Quality Antec or Lian Li case w/ PSU ($100)
WinXP OEM ($100-$130)
17" flat screen ($200)
Okay... $1200... but that's only if you don't already have a display.
If you're concerned about compatibility issues, go to some place like MWave or Monarch and order a motherboard
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Two years ago, though and you could've gotten a 2GHz Athlon64 single-core and still outfitted it with 2GB of RAM. Maybe only 80GB drives (although I think the sweet spot was 120-160GB back then). Prices and performance have been pretty static for the past 2 years.
I still stand by my statement that if you don't need Dell's hand-holding you're better off doing it yourself with quality non-proprietary components. Especially for a game box that you might want to upgra
He left out something important (Score:5, Interesting)
That ensures that EVERYTHING you watch will be scaled, so you couldn't even have the clarity of watching 720p on a 1280x720 set.
Yet the 1280x720 sets, with lower resolutions, cost more.
Welcome to The Market.
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But 720p with my Mac Mini looks horrible, and is clearly NOT running in native resolution. This is a very important issue with any fixed-pixel display, and the writer of this article should be ashamed for not mentioning it.
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HDTV is a clusterfuck. (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder if you have a 1366x768 display, if you could bypass the internal scaler by feeding it a DVI signal from an HTPC, and then use the HTPC to position the 1280x720p frame in the center of the 1366x768 one, thus giving you an unscaled image?
Any TV designer who automatically scales 1280x768 up to 1366x768 without an option to turn it off and just display it with black bars ought to be shot.
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It makes absolutely no difference either way to picture quality.
Really. I looked into this and its a nonstarter. Go look at a 720p panel next to a '768p' panel (like the Samsung, there are a few out there) with same source. They look pretty much identical.
Almost everything you watch for the next while will be upconverted in some manner. All DVDs, for example.
Anything but plasma (Score:2, Informative)
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I also suspect that is can only display 480p, and nothing higher. When I try to play to it from my Xbox in 720p, it doesn't work -though my comcast HD box says that it is sending the signal in 1080i and it seems to be able to display that.
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I think the original Xbox may have been able to output 1080i with some games, but I am not sure.
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Too bad I didn't realize I could turn on 1080i until now - the only game I think that supports it is Arcade Poker! which will look so much better now!
I can make it even simpler (Score:2, Insightful)
There is no Step Two.
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I don't know what planet you're from, but around here TVs are not replaced every 5-6 years! In fact, our TVs are all at least 10 years old, and we're only considering replacing one any time soon.
When we get a new TV, I'll make sure it's 1080p because we're still going to have it in a decade or so.
DLP (Score:2)
The only downside is you can't hang them on a wall. To me that isn't a problem. I still have a component rack with my receiver, DVD player, etc in it and my front floor standing speakers. A TV on the wall would be out of place
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Don't let fud like this scare you out of getting a great looking and much cheaper DLP screen. If it has lag, which is very unlikely then take it bac
My HDTV experience (Score:2)
Apparently this set is a rarity in features found today: it can do 1080i but can't do 720p. However, it does not letterbox 1080i content to preserve the HD aspect ratio. Only recently have I been able to instruct my cable box to correct for this (except that it overcorrects).
If the
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Yeah I'm a little confused about that since I'm typing this message using a 19" CRT which matches 1080p (and has a much greater framerate...)* which I purchased over five years ago for less than $250 at Best Buy.
*I never put it up that high though because for some reason UI and
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I don't know, but I agree it's ridiculous. I'm looking into getting a small (~20") LCD HDTV, and you know what? It's cheaper to buy a 20" widescreen computer monitor and add a tuner to one of my computers than it is to buy a 20" HDTV! If I want to just tune analog TV (but keep the high-res display for forward compatibility), I could build a whole MythTV box for that price, too!
Paying for the "HD" label? (Score:2)
Even when it lacks internal NTSC or ATSC tuners or even CableCard slots! I can only think it's to cover the licensing costs for the mandatory DRM compatibility.
The matching Apple 21" Studio Display (19.8" viewable) for my old Blue & White G3 does 2048x1536 @ 60Hz (with SwitchResX, would like freeware alternative) which is what I drive it at. Originally released it had a max advertised resolution of 1600x1200, but today witho
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Any idea on how we might fix this?
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As I had heard it explained before, at 1080i the CRT's electron gun only has to light up 540 lines per pass. To do 720p it has to do, well, 720, and that was more difficult and made the sets more expensive.
Any idea on how we might fix this?
Maybe an upconverter that can bring video up from 720p to 1080i. I don't know if such things even exist for that resolution pair.
Best Widescreen Gaming Monitor? (Score:2)
I use this monitor with my PC and it's the ideal screen-size for my viewing distance of 6'. I lean back on a reclining c
Lone voice in the wilderness (Score:5, Interesting)
With that said, personally, I just want an old-fashioned CRT, and I've been tempted by the likes of these [samsung.com]. No rear projects or having to rethink A/V furniture, no young technologies that have new and interesting problems that have yet to be acceptably solved (be it dead pixels or greater susceptibility to burn-in), not even a rear projection, just good old-fashioned ions-on-phosphorous, and for a reasonable price. However, I'm relutctant to purchase even these because I've yet to see a direct view CRT that supports 1080p, and I see no point in getting a television that doesn't support features that will probably be worth having in the next ten years.
And speaking of "ten years," I want an appliance, not yet another piece of technology that gets thrown out after 3-4 years. If I cannot be reasonably assured that the television I'm considering buying will neither be obsolete in three years nor outright non-functioning, my NTSC set continues to work (from back when the most complicated question I had while shopping was "What kind of inputs does it have?")
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Personally I spent 500 dollars, I got a 52 inch CRT. Guess what? That's my tv for the next 5-10 years. When I buy my next tv, I'll probably have it in the same room as my 52 inch still. When I buy a third, that 52 will be my bedroom tv. I still have a 300 dollar tv that I bought almost 10 years ago that works perfectly and I still use to watch
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Uhhh, I'm working on a CRT right now that does 1600x1200 progressive. There's nothing magical about it. Had it for years.
Now, if someone wants to buy something and they don't NEED it, why whine about someone buying something you don't value?
I don't value sporty cars. They burn lots of gas and cost more $. That doesn't mean the people who buy them are necessarily "falling" for the marketing.
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I probably should have said "not every station is in High Def" even though a high def station doesn't broadcast everything in
A better non rambling URL (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-definition_telev ision [wikipedia.org]
For those who don't RTFA you really need to look at screen resolution before you buy. The best resolution is 1920x1080 (1080i and/or 1080p) with 1280x720 (720i and/or 720p) at the lower end, however there are variants. For standard definition you have 768×576 or 720x540 (PAL) or 640×480 and 852×480 (NTSC) but there are variants.
The bottom line is if you
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One sixth of 1080 is 180.
And while we're at it, I was once told that a 28" screen was four times the size of a 14" screen, and eight times the volume and weight! Rubbish, of course, it's twice the size and don't let anyone tell you differently!
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1080p: 1920 x 1080 = 2,073,600 pixels
480p: 852 x 480 - 408,960 pixels
1080p / 480p = 5.0704