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Arkanun
07.02.08, 05:18
What teh diference between FullHD and HD Ready?
Thankss!

hitman
07.02.08, 13:57
its the max native resolution of the tv.

full hd max 1080p ===> 1920x1080p
hd ready max 720p ===> 1280x720p

depending on the tv there are a lot of tvs that are called hd ready but has less then 720p

ChuckNorris
02.03.08, 00:43
Actually this is not right. If a TV shows the official HD ready sign it must be able to show at least 720p as it's native solution. It can be more, i think many older TVs have some 13xx resolution.

OverlordQ
08.03.08, 11:37
its the max native resolution of the tv.

full hd max 1080p ===> 1920x1080p
hd ready max 720p ===> 1280x720p

depending on the tv there are a lot of tvs that are called hd ready but has less then 720p

Thats . . . just about as far from being correct without being wrong.

hd ready means the minimum is 720 lines.

Handy chart here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HD_ready).

Dark_Matter
13.03.08, 01:00
"HD Ready" refers to a display that is capable of accepting and displaying a high-def signal at either 720p, 1080i, or 1080p using component video or HDMI input, But does not have a built-in HD-capable tuner.

Trivolve
19.05.08, 05:00
"HD Ready" refers to a display that is capable of accepting and displaying a high-def signal at either 720p, 1080i, or 1080p using component video or HDMI input, But does not have a built-in HD-capable tuner.

Actually, no. A quick search of "Full HD" at wikipedia leads to the "1080p" wiki.

720p (usually 1280x720 or 1366x720)= 720 progressive lines across the screens. just imagine the tv signal going

.............................-->
.............................-->

across the screen.

1080p (1920x1080) then, is 1080 progressive lines.

1080i is no big deal, it's a cheapskate way of attaining 1080p-like quality by interlacing the video (which reduces the quality somewhat).



And HD-ready means it can display 720p and (most of the time) 1080i. Full HD means it can display 1080p as well.

Pickle
19.05.08, 09:48
http://hdbits.org/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page

best reference i have ever seen on net about hd content.

capito
19.05.08, 11:56
i thought that HD ready meant that the hdtv is available to show "full hd content" (1080p-i) even though the screen is like 13XX x 7XX
and FullHD is a hdtv of 1920x1080 px. (so it can show everything)

so a hdtv with hd ready is like the cheaper option compatible with any hd content used these days.

yoco
20.05.08, 12:30
I have to say that this HD stuff confused me since begining. I just don't know what to buy.
I do have one question. What resolution is better to buy: 280x720 or 1366x720 for 720?

buggeroff
24.05.08, 11:29
I've noticed some television have a resolution of 1366 x 768. I assume they could output something x 720?

hitman
24.05.08, 11:50
I've noticed some television have a resolution of 1366 x 768. I assume they could output something x 720?

yes they have a slightly higher resolution than 1280x720 that is actually 720p

thereupemi
24.05.08, 12:05
i bought HD READY , dont think about doing something with it, if you got money then its not a question go for the FULL HD