The telly is pretty much dead and gone now. Walk into any high street shop
that sells televisions and all you’ll see is a vast array of wide-screen
flat-panel television sets.
If you’re thinking about buying a new flat-screen TV then you’ve probably
heard the advice that says you should look out for the HD-Ready logo that
ensures a TV can be used to display high-definition television and films. That’s
good advice but it’s not the whole story.
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There are actually three different types of
HD
(high-definition) formats currently being used by the television and film
industries, and different TV sets will handle these formats in different ways.
It’s therefore worth going into a little more detail so that you know exactly
what you’re getting before you splash out hundreds of pounds on a new set.
Format frenzy
High-definition television broadcasts, such as those available from Sky or
Virgin Media, tend to use two different formats, known as 720p and 1080i. The
third format is called 1080p, and is used by Hollywood film studios when they
release their films on Blu-ray or HD DVD discs. We’ll explain what these numbers
mean in a second.
The good news is that any television that carries the HD-Ready logo will work
with all three of these formats. That’s why it’s so important to look out for
that logo, as it ensures that you’ll never miss out on watching any HD films or
television programmes because you accidentally bought the wrong type of set.
However, each of these three formats provides a different level of image
quality, and some of the more basic HD-Ready television sets may not be able to
give you the full image quality made possible by each format. So to understand
what’s going on here we need to explain how these different HD formats work.
Line by line
The most basic of the three HD formats is 720p. Less expensive HD-Ready
television sets will primarily be designed with this format in mind. The screen
on 720p sets is divided into 720 horizontal lines of
pixels.
In order to create the appearance of a smoothly moving image, those 720 lines
are rapidly updated (or ‘refreshed’) dozens of times every second.
The ‘p’ in ‘720p’ means that the image is updated using a technique known as
‘progressive scan’. The TV starts by updating the first horizontal line in the
image at the top of the screen, and then progresses down to the bottom of the
screen one line at a time. Once that’s done and the whole image has been
‘refreshed’ the TV jumps back to the first line of the image and starts all
over again. If you’ve got a 720p television set and you’re watching a television
programme on Sky HD that is also broadcast in 720p format then your TV set will
be a perfect match for that broadcast, and you’ll see the programme in all its
high-definition glory.
But, as we’ve mentioned, high-definition TV broadcasts can also use another
format, called 1080i. 1080i programmes are designed to display on a TV set with
1,080 horizontal lines across the screen. However, the ‘i’ in 1080i means that
the image is updated using a technique known as
‘interlacing’
rather than the
progressive
scan technique of the 720p format. This means that instead of updating every
line in the image, the TV only updates every other line in effect, it only
updates half the image at a time. Once it’s done that it goes back and updates
the second half of the image.
It’s important to know that a basic HD-Ready TV set that has a 720-line
screen can still handle a TV signal that is broadcast in 1080i. But, in order to
do so it will need to shrink the image down from a 1,080-line image to 720
lines, causing a noticeable loss in detail.
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