![]() Posted on Monday, 22:59 GMTThanks guys, I posted as Anonymous at 11:18 am. Now as I said in the beginning, this will probably not be the case for those watching CRT based HDTV's. Material that stays pretty static on the screen (beautiful vistas, talking heads, etc.) may look better in 1080i. ![]() This is my belief (albeit backed by many professional video folks), that even if you had a TV that supports 1080p (which will support both 1080i and 1080p natively), the 720p picture will look better on any program that has even a moderate amount of movement. It has the same number of lines as your native display and is non-interlaced. Now you could argue that having only 720 lines of resolution, of course 720p will look better. In my case (DLP-set), 1080i almost always looks worse than 720p. Therefore, for CRT based systems, people tend to prefer 1080i over 720p. Unlike micro-display technology LCD, DLP, and Plasma, CRTs do not display non-interlaced signals very well. Some of the reason that you may see a better picture with 1080i is that your TV is CRT based.
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