Blurring removed from fast action on HD TVs

Advancements in the HD tech are great. Even with a smashing HDTV, there are always things that annoy u about this`n`that quality-wize.

Big things for me; "floating" backdrops (something moves real quick and it can appear that parts of it are delayed, hard to explain) ; Halo effect (particularly older films when u use the HDTV`s "Movie Mode", actors can appear to have a pixel-ly aurora about them) ; detail (in that if u watch grass with a still camera, u see tremendous detail, then the camera moves and it blurs. When it stills again the sharpness snaps back) very clear when u watch a newsreader who has freakles :p

All things I have no doubt they`ll iron out in good time. What`s more, alot of these TVs have firmware.
 
I hear you on that one. My old man spent a grand on a 32" lcd, I went over to have a look and all was well until any 'night' scenes appeared in shows. The black was heavily pixalated and look bad...

These advancements are needed. It's funny because at launch LCD/HD was hailed as having a superior image. Now you find out they aspire to achieve the image quality of yester-year:

With this technology, flat screen TVs will finally catch up with the outstanding picture quality of bulky, glass tube TVs.
 
name='Mr. Smith' said:
I hear you on that one. My old man spent a grand on a 32" lcd, I went over to have a look and all was well until any 'night' scenes appeared in shows. The black was heavily pixalated and look bad...

These advancements are needed. It's funny because at launch LCD/HD was hailed as having a superior image. Now you find out they aspire to achieve the image quality of yester-year:

I have always held that a high quality CRT would beat the pant off anything else but no one believed me. I think the only technology that might finally beat it is OLED.
 
Not a bad arguement, although I would say that stuff recorded in HD does playback better than when they play `old movies`. Almost as if u can tell if something is genuinely HD when u see it on HDTV.

EDIT: hehe nat jumped in there :p
 
Im still waiting for alot of the main channels to be broadcasted in HD.

Once that happens we will finally see some eye candy.

I find that the screen goes very watery/pixelated. Prefer my good old CRT widescreen. :)
 
Just having gone from 32" high quality CRT TV to a 32" high quality LCD I can say without a shadow of a doubt that HD Content looks far superior to SDTV. I play games on the 360/PS3 and Blu-Ray on the PS3 and the picture is breathtaking
 
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