urbanlegend wrote:
VijayDinanathChavan wrote:
urbanlegend wrote:
Maybe a bit off topic can anyone enlighten me if a 1080p HD DVD will work with a upconverting 720p DVD Player?
I aint going to buy a new 1080p tv anytime soon but have a tv that will show 720p/1080i so lets say I buy one of those 1080p HD DVD will I be able to watch it on my TV?
If I am not wrong, UPCONVERTING dvd player plays only regular dvds (not hd-dvd & bd-dvd) i.e. it upconverts 480i/p dvd to 720p OR 1080i.
1080p TV (with few exceptions) is capable of accepting all kinds of inputs, 480i/p, 720p & 1080i/p.
Generally, 1080p output is/will be available from HD-DVD player, BD player & Computer (having proper video card).
Sorry forgot to mention that if I get a HD/Blue Ray player will the TV down convert the 1080p signal to 720p or 1080i to show the picture? Also is it worth getting a HD/Blue Ray player if the TV cant show 1080p? Or should I stick to a Upconverting Player?
till you get 1080p display and all discs become 1080P, you can use blue ray or HD DVD player to upscale plus watch native 720P or 1080i, whatever u prefer through HDMI

another variable! because I dont think, these new blueray or hd dvd players upscale via component or can give u 720p or 1080i via component?

correct me if I am wrong!
if u care BR
Philips' BDP9000 Blu-ray player now on sale
Posted Oct 25th 2006 5:35PM by Erik Hanson
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
A media rep for the Blu-ray Disc Association recently sent us an email mentioning the Philips BDP9000/37 in it, and we couldn't find any retailers selling it at the time. Well today we're getting reports on the availability of the player at Wal-mart for only $898, apparently already shipping. Most other major big box and online retailers -- we checked Best Buy, Circuit City, Amazon, Target, Buy.com, and Newegg -- either don't have it listed at all, or have it for pre-order only. A post at AVS Forum notes that some Wal-mart stores may simply be selling the player before its potential release date of November 1st, so potential buyers should move quickly in case this was a mistake. There's also some confusion as to whether the box is just a rebranded Samsung BD-P1000, or if it has different parts inside; the consensus so far seems to be that it uses the same reference design but with different video DAC (digital-to-analog converter) components (216MHz vs 192MHz for the Samsung). The Philips model features a Faroudja scaler for upscaling standard-def DVDs up to 1080p (progressive) on HDMI or 1080i (interlaced) on component, HD playback of WMV HD (VC-1) video, HDMI and multi-channel audio outputs, a multiformat card reader, and support for BD-ROM / BD-R / BD-RE / BD9, DVD+/-R,+/-RW, CD-R / RW, MP3, JPEG, and HD JPEG. Another thing to note is the reduced price when compared to the $1000 - $1300 pricetags of the Samsung and Panasonic players. Are we starting to see the effects of competition in the next-generation player market? And will the availability of multiple vendors for Blu-ray products push the price down (think economies of scale) faster or further than the effectively one-manufacturer HD DVD format
