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OK, that didn't work either. I finally found out that the Optical input labeled "TV" doesn't work. I plugged it into the one labled "DVD" and it worked fine. (My DVD is plugged into the one labled "CD"). Apparently the labels are just suggestions; an easy way of keeping track on the remote.

This weekend's broadcast of the NFL championship games was sweet in HD and 5.1!
 
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Check out this hog!



Panasonic Unveils 103-Inch TV Screen <!-- END HEADLINE -->
<!-- BEGIN STORY BODY -->


NEW YORK - Home TV screens just keep getting bigger. And there's no end in sight. Panasonic pitched a tent outside the New York Stock Exchange yesterday to show off the biggest high-definition plasma screen yet.
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At 103 inches, it's an inch bigger than versions being produced by Samsung and LG.

Panasonic vice president Andrew Nelkin says the new screen weighs 400 pounds. If you buy one, and have a wall big enough to fit it, you'll want professional installation.

He also says he wouldn't be surprised to see someone come up with an even bigger screen before long.
 
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A good article concerning HDTV, mostly about 1080p.

It turns out the 1080p hdtv's currently out won't even be able to handle blue-ray players and hd-dvd players that play the 1080p function as they lack the input devise.

The good news is that those 1080input also tv's are coming out shortly.

I scanned through the article, and I must be missing something
The guy states you wont be able to receive a 1080p signal, and then he states that Sony is using HDMI outputs on its PS3.
Well nearly all HDTVs that have come out in the past year plus, 1080p most definitely included, have come with HDMI inputs.
So what am I missing here???
 
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Good News for Consumers - LCD OverSupply Promises Lower LCD Prices

This will be seen at both small end (19-inch - PC) and high end (42-47inch LCD-TV). Could be a good value in offing around 3rd - 4th quarter this year.
LINK
New plants, weak demand cause LCD price drop <!-- END HEADLINE -->
<!-- BEGIN STORY BODY -->Dan Nystedt, IDG News Service - MacCentral1 hour, 59 minutes ago


A string of new LCD factories being built, combined with slow demand for notebook and desktop PC screens, caused LCD prices to fall during the first three months of the year, and the downward trend is expected to continue, vendors and analysts said.
Falling prices for LCD (liquid crystal display) screens should help ensure that users find bargains for new monitors, laptops and LCD-TVs this year, since the screen is among the most expensive components in those products. The price declines are also causing vendors to improve picture quality to catch users' eyes and draw them away from competitors.
Makers such as LG.Philips LCD Co. Ltd. and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., the world's two largest LCD producers, are ramping up production at state-of-the-art factories, while rivals continue to add new lines at existing plants. Other big players, such as AU Optronics Corp. in Taiwan, will bring new plants on line later this year, which should help keep LCD prices tame.
"The biggest impact from the new plants will be in the first part of this year, but there will be some impact throughout the year," said Frank Lee, an LCD industry analyst for Deutsche Securities Asia Ltd. in Taipei.
The new LCD plants were built largely to keep pace with demand for LCD-TVs, which have been among the hottest selling items this year. Cutthroat competition among LCD makers has also been a boon to users, ensuring steadily falling prices for the past few years, even as screen sizes increase.
For example, prices for 42-inch LCD screens that will be delivered to TV makers in the second half of April fell by $35 each since the end of March, to an average of $890, according to WitsView Technology Co., an industry researcher. Prices for 19-inch panels for PC monitors fell $5 to an average $160.
Average selling prices for LCD panels at AU Optronics fell nearly 12 percent quarter-on-quarter by the end of March, and the company forecast continued declines into the second quarter, according to executives at its first quarter earnings conference on Thursday.
"Screen prices have remained weak in April but should stabilize in May or June," said Hsiung Hui, executive vice president of strategic planning at AU.
The company expects the price of screens used in desktops and laptops to drop by around 10 percent quarter-on-quarter during the April to June period, while LCD-TV screen prices will decline by a smaller percentage, in the mid single digits, it said.
The outlook on falling prices has been echoed by AU's larger rivals in the industry.
LG.Philips said its sales declined in the first quarter compared to the fourth because of a decline in the average selling prices in LCDs destined for laptops and desktop monitors, with an overall price decline of around 10 percent for all LCD screen products.
The South Korean company, a joint venture between LG Electronics Inc. and Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV, said its average selling prices in the current quarter will drop by a mid- to high-single digit percentage compared to the end of the first quarter.
The company is increasing production at a state-of-the-art LCD factory in Korea, as is rival Samsung. AU is building a similar plant in Taiwan that it expects to be in production by the third quarter of this year. LG said it would produce mainly 42-inch and 47-inch screens at the plant, aimed at the LCD-TV market.
Other LCD industry competitors are also increasing production to keep up with demand for LCD-TVS. On Wednesday, S-LCD Corp., the LCD panel manufacturing joint venture of Sony Corp (NYSE:SNE - news). and Samsung, said it plans to invest a further 222 billion won (US$238 million) to expand production at its factory in Tangjeong, South Korea.
 
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I scanned through the article, and I must be missing something
The guy states you wont be able to receive a 1080p signal, and then he states that Sony is using HDMI outputs on its PS3.
Well nearly all HDTVs that have come out in the past year plus, 1080p most definitely included, have come with HDMI inputs.
So what am I missing here???

What's missing computing power to render the 1080p signal @ 60 fps. The chip inside the television that performs all the decisions about up-converting or rendering.

A - If it cannot - with sufficient speed - render a true 1080p 60fps signal then it will likely either
Be showing in 1080p at lower frame-rates than those used by the film-maker.
Or, really showing something like a 1080i image (i.e. down-converting on-theflly, which takes less power as it is lossy).

I was told once FWIW, that Panasonic's displays have long had the right number of pixels (density) to support true 1080p - it was only recently that they felt satisfied in the software needed to render on chip the incoming signal.

Also found this comment from the article interesting..

Another reason why 720 looks better than 1080 in HDTV is because the 1080-line formats that can offer better temporal resolution than 720 are not part of the standard. Although the ATSC includes 1080p formats, they are capped at 24 and 30 frames per second; so there are neither 1080p50 nor 1080p60 variants, which are the only 1080-line formats that will (in practice) surpass 720p60.

The reason for that is that 1080p50 and 1080p60 would exceed the 19Mbit/s bandwidth allotted in a 6Mhz channel as required by the ATSC standard. The highest HDTV formats that don’t exceed that limit (and in fact are very close to it) are 720p60, 1080p30 and 1080i60.

To sum things up regarding this topic, the ATSC only allows 1080p broadcasting at a maximum frame rate of 30 frames per second due to bandwidth requirements. 720p video can go up to 60 frames per second with the same bandwidth. 1080 line formats can only deliver a maximum of 60 fields per second (1080i60) or 30 frames per second (1080p30). Both 720 and 1080 line formats, as implemented in ATSC broadcasting, deliver practically the same amount of pixels per second.

So if the on-chip software and algorithms assume ATSC then you may simply not be able to fully render 1080p 60fps.
 
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