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Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
> Still, no matter what you do, there is no way the problem can ever be
> solved without distortion or black bars.
You forgot the third option (which most widescreen TVs support): Zoom
the 4:3 image until it fits the 16:9 screen.
--
- Warp
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Warp wrote:
> Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
>> Still, no matter what you do, there is no way the problem can ever be
>> solved without distortion or black bars.
>
> You forgot the third option (which most widescreen TVs support): Zoom
> the 4:3 image until it fits the 16:9 screen.
Ah yes, optio 3: cut off the edges. (Which means that any signal
containing a 16:9 image padded to 4:3 aspect looks perfect, while normal
4:3 has bits of the edges missing.)
This is the option I use on my mum's TV. Usually the missing parts
aren't that important. (Although one still wonders why they created this
problem to begin with...)
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Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
> This seems to be very, very rare. I've only seen it on one or two LCD
> displays. [Including the one I'm using right now, BTW.] Well over 99% of
> the LCDs I've seen have no dead pixels at all.
Depends on the LCD too.
My PSP had two dead pixels (one was always off, the other was always white).
I had the PSP changed due to a button getting broken, and the new PSP has
one dead pixel (but it's only slightly "dead", as it looks a lot smaller
than the full dead pixels and fortunately doesn't bother so much; probably
has only one color channel dead).
This is a known issue at least with the original PSP. You just have to
live with it.
--
- Warp
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Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
> Usually the missing parts aren't that important.
They are important because they change the image composition.
--
- Warp
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Warp wrote:
> Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
>> This seems to be very, very rare. I've only seen it on one or two LCD
>> displays. [Including the one I'm using right now, BTW.] Well over 99% of
>> the LCDs I've seen have no dead pixels at all.
>
> Depends on the LCD too.
Yeah, it does seem to vary. I see LCDs with multiple dead pixels, and I
see others with absolutely none. Like, each time I walk into our lab
office, I see 12 monitors, all LCD, all with zero dead pixels. Yet the
one at my desk has 4 dead pixels.
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Warp wrote:
> Nature is very horizontal.
Even the eyes of horses and goats (and others) have horizontal pupils for
this reason.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
There's no CD like OCD, there's no CD I knoooow!
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On 4/23/2009 11:54 AM, Warp wrote:
> A stretched image bothers me a lot. I just *can't* watch anything if
> the image is stretched. It just looks wrong and annoying. It seems that
> I'm the only person in the world with this problem, though.
You're not alone.
--
...Chambers
www.pacificwebguy.com
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On 4/23/2009 1:34 PM, Orchid XP v8 wrote:
> But my question would have to be... what the hell is so great about
> "widescreen" anyway?? Why is it that today everything must be
> widescreen? (Except for 99% of all the video you might want to watch...)
> Even my friggin' *laptop* is widescreen. WTF?
16x9 more closely matches what you actually see with your eyes, so it's
more immersive overall.
--
...Chambers
www.pacificwebguy.com
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On 4/23/2009 1:43 PM, Mike Raiford wrote:
> Movies. Movies have been widescreen forever. People want to watch the
> movie "unaltered" at home. That's why.
By the way, is anyone else annoyed by the fact that as soon as most TVs
sold became 16x9, people started making movies in 22:10? WTF, people,
make up your minds!
--
...Chambers
www.pacificwebguy.com
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On 4/24/2009 3:33 AM, Invisible wrote:
> And brightness. (Although this tends to be more of a problem with small,
> portable displays. And since it's impossible to make a small, portable
> CRT display *at all*, I guess we can live with that.)
http://mandmonlineshopping.com/images/jensen-j56-bwr.jpg
--
...Chambers
www.pacificwebguy.com
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