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#1 |
Junior Member
Jul 2007
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My Dell monitor can go up to 1080i on component and that's how I play my PS3 and BD Movies ..
Now What is the difference between 1080i and 1080p ??? In other words, what am I losing ?? I'm talking here about what the Actual HUMAN EYE can see .. Not technical differences only .. |
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#2 |
Active Member
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I believe the only visual cue you'll see is on quick camera pans. Where a 1080p image will be more solid while a 1080i image will be less coherent, blurry. Not choppy but it will have some loss of detail.
I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong. ![]() |
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#3 | |
Active Member
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#4 |
Junior Member
Jul 2007
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I'm using the DVI-D for PC (1920x1200 Resuloution) ..
Beside, I read in many places that this monitor is limited to 720p on DVI .. the 1080i can be only obtained on Component .. please correct me if i'm wrong .. |
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#6 |
Member
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I don't think the human eye can really translate the differnce between 1080p and 720p until your screen size is +60", unless you sit closer that you are supposed to. Yet the difference will be apparent for your computer since you are most likely sitting on top of it. Not to mention the better quality transfer you have via HDMI and DVI versus component.
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#7 | |
Moderator
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Wrong way (bob): Throw away every other field, and treat the signal like 540p and upscale that to 720p, 768p, 1080p etc. Easy. Cheap. No artifacts. You lose half the resolution! (Yes a LOT of monitors and TVs do this) Right way (weave): Take two fields and merge them into one frame. The problem here is you need to properly detect 3:2 and 2:2 pull-down. And, there can possibly be inter-field motion for 1080i/60, so that has to be fixed (e.g. detect the motion and bob only the parts with inter-field motion). Not easy, cheap. Possible artifacts if not done right. But, full or near full resolution. Gary Last edited by dialog_gvf; 07-31-2007 at 06:30 PM. |
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#8 | |
Active Member
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But back to your question. As others also stated, the question is not so much 1080i vs 1080p (in your case). Even if component also would support 1080p, you would see a huge difference between component and DVI/HDMI. |
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#11 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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the difference is simple...
but here are some links to help explain http://hubpages.com/hub/interlaced-vs-progressive http://www2.panasonic.com/webapp/wcs...tGroupId=24987 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlace http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_scan Hope that helps a bit |
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#12 | |
Senior Member
Sep 2005
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A similar thing can happen on compression when doing frame-by-frame compression if the compressor gets off one field and starts interlacing the wrong two frames (one from frame A and one from frame B). However, this latter problem is easy to check in the master before it goes out the door. |
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#13 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Those links do not tend to touch on resolution much. Every LCD tv I have seen that has 1080i and NOT 1080p max resolution is that of 720p. So in this instance a big difference between 1080i and 1080p especially if you want to use the monitor also for a pc.
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#14 | |
Senior Member
Sep 2005
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1080i shows only 540 lines per field 1080i shows 1080 lines per frame There are two fields per frame and the 540 lines per field are interlaced as the "i" implies to get the full 1080 lines in a frame. |
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#16 |
Member
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HD television is displayed on your screen in pixels - the more pixels in a smaller area, the sharper the image (the number of pixels on the screen is referred to as the resolution, usually indicated in a vertical by horizontal format). A quick reference was developed by the industry to inform customers the kind of quality that modern displays are capable of.
The year of HD truly begins with 1080p. You may have heard of 1080i - the gold standard in high definition up until now - what's the difference between p and i anyway? To Interlace or Not to Interlace... 1080i indicates an interlaced display whereas 1080p indicates a progressive display. A 1080i interlaced display takes 1080 lines of resolution and breaks them down to two fields of 540 lines - one displayed after the other, fooling the eye into seeing 1080 lines of picture. This means that there will be roughly 1 million pixels onscreen at any given time. A 1080p progressive display shows 1080 lines of resolution in each field. This doubles the resolution onscreen to over 2 million pixels - weighing in at a resoltuion of 1920x1080 pixels. 1080p - The Way to Be With the dawn of the High Definition Optical Disc as well as High Definition gaming and more HD channels every day (HD source required) it's easy to see that you want the most resolution you can get. Don't settle for anything less than 1080p. This is from the Future Shop web site. i hope it helps |
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#18 | |
Moderator
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They should result in the same picture, but due to lousy de-interlacing half the resolution can be lost. Warner even messed up this way on some early HD DVD/BD. For example, Full Metal Jacket came from a 1080i master. They applied bob de-interlacing and ruined the resolution. |
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#19 |
Site Manager
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that future shop thing doesn't know how this works.
there will be a 1 million pixel FIELD for 1/60th of a second (0.17 sec) there will be a 2 million pixel FRAME in 1/30th of a second (0.33 sec) on an interlaced display. On a progresive display you'll get a 2 million pixel deinterlaced FRAME in each 1/60th of a second (0.17 sec) |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
1080i and 1080p difference | Display Theory and Discussion | MetalHead84 | 13 | 11-20-2009 04:45 AM |
1080p vs 1080i Didnt See Much Difference.. | Projectors | CRMA | 18 | 09-08-2009 04:33 AM |
1080i vs 1080p...Why so much difference?? | Display Theory and Discussion | J_WILL_GV | 25 | 04-14-2009 03:39 AM |
No difference 1080i/1080p on BD?? | Blu-ray Players and Recorders | BluLobsta | 2 | 12-23-2008 02:28 PM |
Difference between 1080i and 1080p unconversion? | Home Theater General Discussion | FF750 | 6 | 02-13-2008 10:46 AM |
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