Even if you don’t get full 1080p, at least get 1366 x 768 or whatever, that’s the proper horizontal to vertical aspect ratio.
I have a 1024 x 768 plasma. It really doesn’t matter in day-to-day viewing, but if you want to hook a PC up to it, then everything is stretched out horizontally. I would think there’s a way to fix that, but this technical dude hasn’t figured it out.
I haven’t noticed much of a heat issue with my Panasonic 1080i plasma. The picture does kick ass though (I can’t tell the difference between i and p for several hundred dollars).
I have my screen resolution set at 1280x768 from the Control Panel. Picture fits the 16:9 format perfectly. Could go higher res, but then couldn’t read the monitor from across the room. Had trouble with the stretching at work, too, when we all changed to flat-panel monitors, then did the same change in resolution and now it’s great.
It’s been a while since I had my PC and TV in the same room to try it. I’m pretty sure I tried all the common resolutions. I’m sort of overly-sensitive to the picture being stretched, so even if it was only stretched a little I wouldn’t have liked it.
Just to clarify:
720p is 1280 x 720
1080p/i is 1920 x 1080
So Control-Z’s and SeaDragonTattoo’s sets above very close to 720p rez (but slightly, trivially off). The picture aspect for 720p and 1080 is 1.7777etc. Control-Z’s set is 1.778646, SeaDragonTattoo’s is 1.67. Close enough.
I don’t think this is true any longer, but 1080 HD plasma sets used to do some tricks to display 1080 content, like show only 1/2 the vertical resolution, i.e 1920 x 540, and stretch the picture vertically. The interpolated lines blended together fairly well from what I saw, although I expect text would be a bit odd looking.
Unless I’m misunderstanding what you’re calculating, isn’t 1024x768 a 1.33 pixel aspect ratio? The actual set is widescreen and acts as such, but the pixel resolution is 1024x768.
Now that you mention it, my TV does have an “auto-adjust” feature that does it’s thing whenever I switch sources, so even though I’ve got the computer’s resolution set at 1280x768, the TV must be doing sometihing extra that makes it look fabulous, making the adjustment to it’s native 1080p resolution, so I guess I’m not being nearly as helpful as I thought I was. Sorry. Oh, and me, too on the sensitive-to-stretching thing. I hate it!
Seriously thinking about getting this but from Amazon, which has the same price as CC’s sale + rebate. The integrated tuner would be best for me so I don’t have to move my PS2.
That won’t be a factor for me as the video screen will be strictly video – disk or (if I ever get it) cable/satellite. Likewise, I don’t watch movies on the 'puter (if only because I have a CD drive, not a DVD drive in same)
I just checked: I would have to upgrade the DVD player, too. The one I got now hasn’t any HDMI jacks on it. Serves me out for cheaping out when I got it last year. How much are Blu-ray players going for now?
Too much still, IMHO, though there are refurbs available in the $200 range. I got a beautiful Denon progressive-scan 1080 up-converter (refurbished) with HDMI output, from eCost for all of $68 with shipping. I love it - definitely not the same as a Blu-ray, but acceptable in the place of one for now. It gets the most possible from a standard DVD. The TV itself does a fair job of upscaling the standard DVD player with the component connection but the Denon’s picture is so much better. I’m happy with it for now, probably just for another year or so.
And the more HDMI inputs you can get on your TV the better. I already had to get an HDMI router for mine, 3 inputs, and will go up to 4 when I get the Blu-ray.
You can use the component video out from the DVD player to the HD monitor component input, assuming it has one (very high probability) This generally works fine, depending on which component is doing the upsampling, and how well they do it. In any case, component video has enough bandwidth for HD, but it does involve an analog/digital conversion.
Yep I have my TivoHD hooked up by component video, and the 1080i HD picture is beautiful. Plus the component cable, if you don’t have one, is probably cheaper.