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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
Screen Options - Bigger is better
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<blockquote data-quote="Nidri" data-source="post: 77211" data-attributes="member: 1342"><p>Imho the most important consideration (apart from trusting your own eyes of course) when buying a TV is the quality of the processing. A TV with good on-board picture processing (scaling, de-interlacing, cadence detection, etc.) should make even a standard def picture (any DStv channel) look watchable. </p><p></p><p>A Sony and Hyundai TV, for example, might even have exactly the same panel inside, but the processing chips are likely to be different. With Blu-ray, both will look fantastic, but with standard def, the one will probably outshine the other. Guess which one?</p><p></p><p>Of course, build quality, service support and all that stuff is important too.</p><p></p><p>My advice? Ask the shop assistant to show you a standard def picture on all the sets you're considering; you'll see what's there, and what's missing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nidri, post: 77211, member: 1342"] Imho the most important consideration (apart from trusting your own eyes of course) when buying a TV is the quality of the processing. A TV with good on-board picture processing (scaling, de-interlacing, cadence detection, etc.) should make even a standard def picture (any DStv channel) look watchable. A Sony and Hyundai TV, for example, might even have exactly the same panel inside, but the processing chips are likely to be different. With Blu-ray, both will look fantastic, but with standard def, the one will probably outshine the other. Guess which one? Of course, build quality, service support and all that stuff is important too. My advice? Ask the shop assistant to show you a standard def picture on all the sets you're considering; you'll see what's there, and what's missing. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
Screen Options - Bigger is better
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