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Ask HDBeat: poor analog signals

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Jake wrote us a note asking us to clarify something in our HDTV Buying Guide: Choosing the right kind. He is wondering what we meant by "Poor non-digital signal" and "O.K. digital signals" when referring to Cons of a LCD/DLP rear-projection. Well Jake, I hope I can clear this up for you.

I am assuming that you have never owned a big screen before so lets start there. Many people (including myself) have never purchased a big screen because picture quality has always outweighed in importance over the screen size. The same thing can be said here as well. The rear-projection DLP/LCD sets you are looking at are big, sometimes very big. That basic cable (non-digital) signal that some people still have produces a lot of noise that is more evident in a larger screen. The 480i (basic cable and satellite) signal was never designed to look pretty on a big widescreen set. That is why HD is so important.

Size is a simply solution Jake but there is more to it. The tube TVs that make cable look, dare I say, good are the only type of displays that can support both interlaced and progressive scan. They can natively support a 480i (cable and satellite) picture. Here is the kicker, most digital displays do not support that same interlaced picture without some work. They take interlaced picture and convert it into a progressive-scan image by artificially producing the extra data. This process creates a lot of digital artifacts making the cable and satellite pictures look "just O.K." Seeing is believing so take a trip down to a local electronics store and ask them to show you the difference. You will see what I mean.

Feel free to drop us a question and we will do our best in answering it for you.