Premiums get HDMI

Nice.

Looks like I'll be selling my launch day core to a mate and picking up one of the new HDMI Premiums.

HDMI is just too handy to pass up..
 
rather than starting a new thread you reckon that 1080p wil ever only be on larger LCD's ? 37'' +

As surely that already narrows the market down a LOT ?
 
Unless you're getting a massive TV for Blu-ray or HD-DVD, it's probably not worth getting a 1080p model until the next lot of consoles appear with 1080p gaming in 2011 or whenever.
 
Agreed. I'm gaming on 110" projector screen at the moment - PS3 at 1080p and 360 at 720p (my receiver converts to this when upconverting component to HDMI) and, other than text which looks a little sharper on the PS3, there's very little between them when you start playing.

I'd go for a 1080p/24 screen if HDDVD and Blu-ray was your main concern, but for gaming, any of the hi def resolutions are fine, especially on the averaged sized tele.
 
NokkonWud said:
They will output an upscaled representation of a 720p developed game though.

Nah man... there are 1080p rendered games being developed. Virtua Tennis 3 is one example, and is already out.

There won't be many though. Developers are being encouraged to develop in 720p as MS state this is the 'sweetspot' for performance/graphical quality.
 
ic1male said:
Unless you're getting a massive TV for Blu-ray or HD-DVD, it's probably not worth getting a 1080p model until the next lot of consoles appear with 1080p gaming in 2011 or whenever.
I think 1080p games will be here much sooner than 2011 ;)

Then again the difference betwwen 720p and 1080p isn't as big as the difference between CRT 576p and LCD 720p
 
NokkonWud said:
They will output an upscaled representation of a 720p developed game though.

Virtua Tennis 3 is rendered natively at 1080p on both the 360 and the PS3. It's not upscaled.
 
1080p what is this number! please call it by its correct retail buzz word 'Full HD' yes thats right the TV you bought last year that we told you was HD ready is now obsolete you need a 'True HD' set.........just look for the special stickers on selected models. :p

What a load of hog ****.
 
RuMp3l4$k1n said:
1080p what is this number! please call it by its correct retail buzz word 'Full HD' yes thats right the TV you bought last year that we told you was HD ready is now obsolete you need a 'True HD' set That makes your SD signals which you spend 90% of your time watching everyday looks like crap.........just look for the special stickers on selected models. :p

What a load of hog ****.
Fixed :p
 
HD Ready = 720p or 1366*768 resolution
Full HD = 1080p or 1920*1080 resolution

But this isn't the whole story, the quality of the scaler in the LCD depends on how good the image is, the scaler on my 40W2000 is excellent (when all the post effects are off) so SD cable is still good quality.
 
Nice one microsoft - screw over your customer base, jeez
Hype up the elite as having HDMI as a seeling point, let people buy them at the higher price without telling them that the normal 360s are having HDMI anyway. Whilst it may be good for new owners, i think its a bit of a disgrace tbh
 
thecremeegg said:
Nice one microsoft - screw over your customer base, jeez
Hype up the elite as having HDMI as a seeling point, let people buy them at the higher price without telling them that the normal 360s are having HDMI anyway. Whilst it may be good for new owners, i think its a bit of a disgrace tbh

Ignoring the fact that the Elite hasnt been released here yet and so nobody has bought them :p
 
Dutch Guy said:
HD Ready = 720p or 1366*768 resolution

Not quite true, anything that can decode HD no matter what the output display resolution = HD Ready.
Even low res plasmas such as 704 x 480 resolution as long as they can take an HD input can be called HD Ready even though the viewing experience is blatantly not at HD resolution due to downscaling required.
 
Sclodion said:
Not quite true, anything that can decode HD no matter what the output display resolution = HD Ready.
Even low res plasmas such as 704 x 480 resolution as long as they can take an HD input can be called HD Ready even though the viewing experience is blatantly not at HD resolution due to downscaling required.

No, the industry standard for "HD Ready" is a minimum of 720p, the display also needs to accept HD input via component, dvi or hdmi.

Although, any display lower than this could still be referred to as HD compatible.
 
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