HDTV Set Top Box


I am wanting to begin the exploration into this. We bought a Toshiba HDTV ready and I think that we may now be ready.
Any suggestions on what specs are best to not compromise on?
Any views on the various brands?
angela100

Showing 3 responses by bmpnyc

Hi Angela,I recently upgraded to the Toshiba TW40X81 HDTV ready set myself, and am curious to see what you come up with. Kenny, thanks for the tip, i'll check it out later. For those interested, one of the old Panasonic models does allow high definition recording. My friend brought it to my apartment, but we couldn't get a high def signal with the antennae provided (just experimenting), so I will have to see if my landlord will let me install a dish, (I won't bet on it).
Hi Angela, yes, that Toshiba is damn good. I really enjoy the line doubling for basic TV watching, great black level. Actually sounds good as well! I will keep my eyes and ears open in regards to any developments in HDTV broadcasts. I wish the cable companies would simply carry an HDTV signal, and supply a compatible set top box. There may be trouble ahead for Toshiba owners because I think that Firewire will become the standard for receiving HDTV, and the Toshiba does not have a Firewire input. Hope they make an adapter for all of us early adopters. By the way, are you using a progressive scan DVD player? My Pioneer DV-37 has 3/2 pulldown , and it is much more relaxing when watching movies. It is not as if the difference is amazingly dramatic, it is more (to use an overworked phrase) "filmlike", in the sense that the lack of scan lines seems to enable me to get into a movie as if in a theater, except there is no one behind me to kick my seat. Maybe my eyes have to work less. I don't know about the scientific aspects of not having the flicker of interpolation, but I am not missing the movie theater so much when watching movies at home anymore.
Hi Angela, you must have both. If the TV can display in progressive scan, then the DVD player must send the signal in progressive form in the first place, otherwise you will be watching movies with the built in line doubler, which is not too shabby, but not nearly as good as progressive scan. The TV's line doubler does help with analogue feeds (cable, antennae, VCR, etc.) but all progressive scanning is not equal either. You should look for a DVD player that does 3:2 pulldown. Film runs at 24 fps and video at 30fps and progressive scan is the best method of compensating for the difference available to us. My Pioneer DV-37 does this very well, and is reasonably priced. The new Sony DVP-9000ES does this as well and adds SACD playback. Some new players by Toshiba are available with 3:2 pulldown, but I am not familiar with them. Progressive scan was more than half the reason I upgraded from my Toshiba TW40F80 (non HDTV, non progressive scan) to the TX40X81 which has both features. Hope this helps a bit.