Mouse, Keyboard, Operating System etc...
To be fair most people have an OS, there are cheaper places available and a KB/Mouse isn't expensive

If by 'etc.' you mean screen/speakers... well surely you need that for a console as well?
Mouse, Keyboard, Operating System etc...
Sorry but you've been mislead there is absolutely no difference between Full and Limited, all Full does is remap the Limited spectrum to the 0-255 range for use on monitors and the like.
If you enable full on an unsupported TV you'll get black crush, if you enable Full on a supported TV it will look identical than if both were set at Limited.
Well a fair comparrison would be to have the consoles calibrated to the tv each in turn, otherwise its pointless.
Colours more vibrant on the 360? Turn the colour up when you plug the PS3 in and you will get the same vibrant colours no?
I doubt it as it looked like a grey haze across the image. Can't saturate colours that aren't really there to begin with.
Limited looks the same on both my TV's, exactly the same. Full RGB only works right on my new panel as it fully supports it. I'm not talking movies or games, it's as simple as looking at the XMB, changing the settings and you can see the results instantly. The fact is, limited setting does tend to look washed out, it's been a complaint of many users. Full RGB, if supported, looks lush. If the OP does not have a set that supports full RGB then he'll come to the conclusion that he has, the PS3's colours look washed out... which is the point I'm makingI thought off the top of my head this was for Blu Ray movies.
Games dont use anywhere near the billions of colours available so i VERY much doubt that ANY games will make much benifit from this.
Chances are your new PANEL is just better than your old one and its nothing to do with the RGB settings.
Its been a cumulative £1000.
The spec in my sig was £500ish about 18 months ago, but since then ive upgraded the RAM, the monitor, the case, the Graphics card and some other junk, so probubly totals £1000 now. When you add in all the other junk required for a PC, such as peripherals, hard drives or 4, etc etc, it starts to add up.
No PC will ever beat a consoles 'out of the box' playability.
Limited looks the same on both my TV's, exactly the same. Full RGB only works right on my new panel as it fully supports it. I'm not talking movies or games, it's as simple as looking at the XMB, changing the settings and you can see the results instantly. The fact is, limited setting does tend to look washed out, it's been a complaint of many users. Full RGB, if supported, looks lush. If the OP does not have a set that supports full RGB then he'll come to the conclusion that he has, the PS3's colours look washed out... which is the point I'm making![]()
I thought off the top of my head this was for Blu Ray movies.
Games dont use anywhere near the billions of colours available so i VERY much doubt that ANY games will make much benifit from this.
Chances are your new PANEL is just better than your old one and its nothing to do with the RGB settings.
i just messed around with mine
limited does look more washed out
i went to full and looked much better on xmb
but when i played uncharted the shadows looked a bit blueish on some bits would this be an effect of full not being supported?
Yes you are correct, it's not fully supported.i just messed around with mine
limited does look more washed out
i went to full and looked much better on xmb
but when i played uncharted the shadows looked a bit blueish on some bits would this be an effect of full not being supported?
Yes you are correct, it's not fully supported.
I did find that using limited, I could improve things by dropping the brightness, turning up the backlight and having the colour setting on warm. Looked rather nice but not quite as good as full RGB.
I do have a little full RGB test image, think I got it from AV Forums. Do a search on google and there are a few different ones floating around.