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f13.net General Forums => General Discussion => Topic started by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 05:17:11 AM



Title: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 05:17:11 AM
You guys were so helpful with my RAZR and last computer purchase, I figured I'd bother you again for an HDTV.

HDTV
I don't want to go crazy, but only because my house isn't that big. When we move, I'll get a bigger one, relegating this one to den/game room. So for now I'm thinking 37" or 40".

I'd like 1080p only because it's the highest resolution, but not if it breaks the $2k barrier.

The higher the contrast ratio, I assume the better. I've seen as high as 15,000:1 these days. This number alone wouldn't be as important to me given the range of such ratios.

I've also seen some newer Sony sets with 10bit color, which I also assume is better, but I actually liked the picture on some Samsung models better which were "only" 8bit.

I'd also like DLP because for some reason it does seem to make a different in what I'm watching.

Two HDMI inputs would be ideal, one for the cable box and one for either a computer or eventual console system.

Finally, Plasma vs LCD?

Media Center
I have an old Alienware box (1.73gHz, 1gb RAM, Radeon 9800pro) that I'd like to convert to a media center if possible. Right now the entire computer is dormant though plays the likes of WoW (and presumably WAR) just fine. DX10 very not ready, so I'll never go beyond XP on it (assuming I ever go beyond XP at all).

How easy/hard is it to convert to a media center PC? I'd love it if I could have a Mac-like fancy UI with a separate remote control. I could do this all much easier with one of those external big-capacity drives with rudimentary OSes on it, but I would rather try and repurpose something I already own.

Thanks!


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Arrrgh on August 19, 2007, 06:17:44 AM
I'm pre-coffee but I'll wade in.

LCD, Plasma, and DLP are three distinct flavors. You'll need to choose one. I like my DLP.

For 2000 bucks you can get all your looking for in a bigger screen than you're talking about. Are you physically limited by the area you'll be placing the HDTV?

An older PC will choke on 1080p video. As a test just grab the same trailer from apple/trailers in 480, 720, and 1080 and see which one your old PC is happy with. No idea if you can use a bluray/hd-dvd drive on an older PC.



Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Murgos on August 19, 2007, 07:12:51 AM
You can get a 60" 1080P Samsung DLP for less than $2k now.  No point in dorking around if that's your budget and what you like.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 07:21:04 AM
Thanks guys. Just to clarify, I'm thinking 37-42" because of space limitations. I can't physically fit a 60" as much as I would like one :) Next house maybe, when this purchase becomes relegated to the gameroom/den.

And thanks for noting that DLP!=LCD. Good to know.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Engels on August 19, 2007, 08:21:32 AM
Anyone got any tips on a Hi Def/Blu ray DVD player for a PC? I've seen a crazy price range, from 400 to 2k, and I have no idea what I should be looking for. Anandtech, sadly, has let me down on this one too.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Evildrider on August 19, 2007, 09:03:25 AM
Not sure about for a PC, but if you want a blu-ray just get a Playstation 3.   :-)


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Engels on August 19, 2007, 09:49:03 AM
The kind of games I favor generally don't port too well to console, so a PS3 or Xbox or whatever would be wasted on me. As such, I need a PC-only Hi Def DVD player. Or will eventually, when video rental places starts to carry them.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Kitsune on August 19, 2007, 10:14:11 AM
This (http://www.amazon.com/Sony-KDL-40V2500-Bravia-1080p-HDTV/dp/B000HGQJZW) is my television and I'm super-duper happy with it.  Big enough to watch across twelve feet of living room without being so big that it was inconvenient to fit in, 1080p, 2 HDMIs, 2 Components, and a VGA port.  One caveat that I found out, though, is no 1080p over component for this TV; you need to use HDMI or VGA if you want to use it at full resolution.

People are occasionally having rough times getting HDMI output to work right from PCs; as usual Ati and nVidia are taking their sweet time putting out drivers that don't suck.  You'll probably have a much easier time if you just use a VGA cable for your PC and ignore the HDMI port.  The only problem with that is that our Hollywood friends have DRM on Blu-ray and HD-DVD that can force a movie to display at a shitty resolution if you don't have a DRM-compliant HDMI connection to the TV.  None of the studios have yet enabled that 'feature' to my knowledge, but they might at a future date, at which point you'd be a bit fucked with that PC.

That's why Microsoft loaded Vista up with DRM, high-def DVD players will only play at full resolution if every link in the chain to the TV supports the DRM.  If Vista didn't have that stuff in there, you couldn't play those disks without the anti-piracy crap kicking in and dropping the resolution on the playback.  Ironically, simply buying pirated movies will get you disks without the DRM and which will play just fine on an unsecure OS, so the message here is that if a consumer doesn't want their movies crippled by anti-piracy safeguards, they should buy the pirated copies.  :roll: 


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 10:27:28 AM
This (http://www.amazon.com/Sony-KDL-40V2500-Bravia-1080p-HDTV/dp/B000HGQJZW) is my television and I'm super-duper happy with it.  Big enough to watch across twelve feet of living room without being so big that it was inconvenient to fit in, 1080p, 2 HDMIs, 2 Components, and a VGA port.  One caveat that I found out, though, is no 1080p over component for this TV; you need to use HDMI or VGA if you want to use it at full resolution.

I was looking at a few Bravia TVs in Best Buy today. What's the deal with the "Bravia Engine" I saw on the label? There something special about it?

I liked the picture a lot but they were a bit pricey for the sizes at Best Buy. The 40" you linked definitely has the right price.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 19, 2007, 10:35:49 AM
I've been looking to upgrade my TV so have been deep in the avsforums dimension for a couple of months. If you really want to know every minute detail about everything and get so confused you don't end up buying a TV for months, head over there.

Anyways, I'll try to give you my impressions.

It somewhat depends on what you want to do on it mostly and the type of room you are in (i.e., how far away from the set, is it sunny where you will get a lot of glare or dark).  For gaming, LCD is generally better. For movies, plasma is better because of better blacks. For sports, plasma is better because LCD will give you motion blur unless you step up to a 120hz LCD which are just coming onto the market and are premium priced. Plasma will have a bit more glare from ambient light because of the glossier screens. With a 42 inch or smaller set, unless you are going to be sitting 5 feet away from it, 1080p is likely overkill. My recommendation would be either the  Panny 42 (http://www.amazon.com/Panasonic-TH-42PX75U-720p-Plasma-HDTV/dp/B000O321IW/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/105-7954323-9867658?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1187544438&sr=8-1) if you want to go on the cheaper side. They are being severely discounted right now and are really great tvs.  If you really want to step up to 1080p, the 1080p version (http://www.amazon.com/Panasonic-TH-42PZ700U-1080p-Plasma-HDTV/dp/B000QI1R94/ref=pd_bbs_sr_3/105-7954323-9867658?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1187544438&sr=8-3) is also pretty reasonable.  The new generation of Pioneers just came out and are supposed to be spectacular, so if you want to step up a bit, the 4280 (http://www.amazon.com/Pioneer-PDP-4280HD-720p-Plasma-HDTV/dp/B000RQ5K2A/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/105-7954323-9867658?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1187544572&sr=1-1) is a possibility.

On the LCD side, the consensus seems to be that Samsung  4065F series (http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-LNT4065F-1080p-LCD-HDTV/dp/B000OE02G4/ref=pd_bbs_1/105-7954323-9867658?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1187544633&sr=1-1) is a very good set.  Sammy is just rolling out the 81 series however, that uses locally dimming LEDs to get to 100,000 to 1 dynamic contrast ratios. No one has really seen it yet, but people are very excited about it. The 40 incher will likely be around the 2500-2800 range though.

I used amazon links because they are easy to find but you can find lower prices if you hunt around. I also haven't looked at DLP because I was interested in flat-panel and also think the viewing angles on DLP leave something to be desired.

EDIT: Oh, and unless you go up to the XBR Sony sets (and even then according to some), I've read that the price difference up to Sony isn't really justified.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 11:31:08 AM
Nice info! I was thinking I wouldn't get much today due to it being Sunday and all, so am glad I keep checking back :)

The price for that Samsung definitely is right. But I heard a way long time ago that Plasmas had issues with quality degradation over time. This was like 10 years ago though. Are they a safe investment, insofar as not being any better or worse over the long haul than an LCD? I liked the Plasma pictures I saw today.

As to 720p vs 1080p, I'm honestly leaning the latter not due to broadcast signal but because of the eventual BluRay player I'll need to get. I ain't getting it until the final nail is put into the HD-DVD coffin. Even though I do think that's the way this is going, which is what I felt last year too, I'm not that confident ;) It just seemed to me BluRay discs looked better on 1080p at 42 than they did at 720p on 37", but I could just be fooling myself too.

My viewing distance is about 10' and I don't get much glare from the sun.

As to the cutting edge or even premium stuff, that's why I'm staying away from AVSforums :) Come tax return time in 2009, that's when I'll be able to afford a big thing with an IP address built right into it with all the fancy stats you mentioned. Right now I'm looking for consumer-grade.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 19, 2007, 12:39:46 PM
They have pretty good life spans now. Most of the problems that plasmas had have been resolved as long as you break them in properly and don't set them too bright. The newer ones have image retention preventative measures as well as "screen wipes" that allow you to get rid of IR if you end up getting it. They are serious power hogs though compared to LCD.

On the resolution: at 10' on a 40-42 inch screen, you really aren't going to get a big difference between 720p and 1080p. Here (http://s3.amazonaws.com/carltonbale.com/resolution_chart.png) is a chart that is pretty well accepted as far as screen size/viewing distance to get the benefits of the different resolutions.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 12:57:50 PM
How do you "break them in"? Just by not setting them too bright? Or is there voodoo?

And thanks for the chart. Didn't even know there was a 1440p. Is this mostly for the big ass screens or is this the eventual standard for everything?


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: CmdrSlack on August 19, 2007, 01:22:20 PM
Interesting chart. If I'm reading it right, with the space we have, I should be able to get a smaller TV (30-32" tops) and maybe not even need/benefit from the higher resolutions. Heck, it looks like we'd barely even notice 720p.

So maybe I can afford HD since buying the hugenormous whizbang ones are out of the question for the room in which the TV would live.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Arrrgh on August 19, 2007, 01:35:31 PM
That chart is about videos. If you're using it as a large computer monitor (text, games, whatnot) you'll notice the difference between resolutions regardless of distance.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: CmdrSlack on August 19, 2007, 01:41:25 PM
But for simply TV viewing and XBox360 playing, that chart is good enough?


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 02:44:52 PM
My in-laws have a Samsung 32" HDTV 720p with an Xbox 360 hooked up to it. It looks fantastic even sitting on the floor in front of it playing Viva Pinata with my daughter.

The only thing that would bother me would be playing a icon-heavy/text-heavy game like a PC-based MMO, due to my expectations set by 1920x1080 (or thereabouts)resolution on PC. Since console games have for years been designed for normal CRTs, I suspect anything short of a crazy-rez PS3 game is going to be fine on 720p at that size.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: JoeTF on August 19, 2007, 02:48:41 PM
Check out this cool NHK whitepaper that explains why hdtv sucks and what is proper resolution for given distance and TV size.
EDIT:
forgot the link ;-)
http://www.nhk.or.jp/digital/en/technical/pdf/02_1_1.pdf


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Krakrok on August 19, 2007, 03:02:30 PM

For a DLP I'd go with something like the 'Samsung HLT5087S 50" Slim LED Engine 1080p DLP HDTV'. Amazon @ $1654. With a LED light you won't have any lamp burnout problems (theoretically). However, with my DLP projector sometimes we get headaches if we watch it on fast forward.

For a LCD I'd go with a 'Westinghouse 47" 1080p Flat-Panel LCD HDTV'. Best Buy @ $1349. The 42" is $1079.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Viin on August 19, 2007, 03:03:50 PM
Interesting chart. If I'm reading it right, with the space we have, I should be able to get a smaller TV (30-32" tops) and maybe not even need/benefit from the higher resolutions. Heck, it looks like we'd barely even notice 720p.

Yah, same for me. But try to find a good HDTV under 40"!


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Arrrgh on August 19, 2007, 03:28:52 PM
But for simply TV viewing and XBox360 playing, that chart is good enough?

Sure, 360 games are usually good about having easy to read fonts.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 19, 2007, 03:50:36 PM
How do you "break them in"? Just by not setting them too bright? Or is there voodoo?

And thanks for the chart. Didn't even know there was a 1440p. Is this mostly for the big ass screens or is this the eventual standard for everything?

You turn down the brightness and run full-screen, non-static image stuff on them for the first 200 hours or so. You can pick up a DVD that you can run that will work.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Lt.Dan on August 19, 2007, 04:06:51 PM
Don't get 1080p just because it's the highest resolution - this isn't a PC we're talking about.

Do some research on viewing distance relative to screen size.  Generally speaking, you would need to sit closer than 2-3 times the diagonal measurement of the screen for your eyes to even notice the difference.  So for a 37-42" screen you'd need to sit closer than about 6-8 feet :P

You'll also need to evaluate what HD content you plan on watching.  For me there is no way I can upgrade my DVD library to HD (since I have about 200 movies, mainly 60s through 80s) and HD TV content in Australia is predominantly 720p.  So for me 1080p makes no sense. YMMV.  PS3 or 360 might change this but viewing distance rules here too.

I've been shopping around for a 720p screen and have come down to one of the Sony 'V' series, Pioneer 427 series, or the Panasonic 70A or 700A.  These model numbers almost definitely differ from those available in the US so I haven't provided a link.  I'd expect that you'd come well under budget on all these.

Defintely spend the time reading the AV forums - especially posts about viewing distance.



Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: hal on August 19, 2007, 06:51:13 PM
It is all good and please keep at it I want to everyones options. What about the media center? What vid card, what codex's? You gonna burn it to dvd or hd for the lazy? What ya gonna do?


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: schild on August 19, 2007, 08:12:22 PM
Vizio 47" 1080p LCD. You'll have enough money left to upgrade whatever you want.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 19, 2007, 08:22:24 PM
Vizio? Westinghouse? I've seen these brands at BB, but sorta brushed em off. Maybe wrongly? I assume you're recommending them because they're good quality TVs at least like any other, I just haven't ever heard of them in TVs before. I saw the Westinghouse 42" for around the $1079 Krakrok mentioned. Can't remember if it was full 1080p though.

And thanks Lt.Dan. The earlier chart was helpful, as was your viewing distance thing. I won't be upgrading my DVDs to high-def anytime soon, and while I noted Blu Ray, I really don't give a crap about this next (last) gen format. I expect to be watching broadcast HD and whatever I stream down from wherever, so will look at the signal.

On the Alienware box I want to convert to a media center, if it doesn't do the trick, I'll get something else :)

Quote from: Abagadro
You turn down the brightness and run full-screen, non-static image stuff on them for the first 200 hours or so. You can pick up a DVD that you can run that will work.
This is interesting. What benefits do Plasma provide that would compel something to bother with this sort of extra work, and/or risk having something go wrong if they didn't? Is the image quality that much more noticeable to a Mr Average like me? Is it a pricepoint thing? I care about my equipment and all, I just haven't heard my generation ever spending any real time with what is normally just something you buy at Circuit City, bring home, plug in, and turn on. This sounds like the realm of someone who's got calipers to ensure maximal alignment on their turn table ;)


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: schild on August 19, 2007, 08:30:26 PM
Vizio is a company out of California using mostly top end parts. Westinghouse and such are purely budget brands. I'm not sure how Vizio does it, but both of mine have been fantastic.

Enough people were at the f13 gettogether that saw stuff like Folklore and such on it that I don't even need to back up my word. They can.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: hal on August 19, 2007, 08:39:20 PM
Westinghouse TV are good and cheep. I am sure there are better but the feel from the community is good and cheep. As in good value. If you want better then fine. The question was "tell me more about the media center". The PC , the storage, And for gods sake "THE VID CARD" you gotta drive that bad boy with something.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Lt.Dan on August 19, 2007, 09:04:42 PM
What benefits do Plasma provide that would compel something to bother with this sort of extra work, and/or risk having something go wrong if they didn't? Is the image quality that much more noticeable to a Mr Average like me? Is it a pricepoint thing? I care about my equipment and all, I just haven't heard my generation ever spending any real time with what is normally just something you buy at Circuit City, bring home, plug in, and turn on. This sounds like the realm of someone who's got calipers to ensure maximal alignment on their turn table ;)

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder so go with what you think looks better.  Plasma screens generally have better quality black (ie better definition of the stuff in shadow) and supposedly better fast action (ie sport).  Product stats aren't always the best indication since providers (surprise, surprise) are starting to game these.  So trust your eyeballs and make sure you get to play around with the contrast and brightness in the store so you can compare screens how you'd set it up.   

Oh, and the other advantage of plasma is that they tend to come with a glass front - very important if you have young kids who like to hit/throw things.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 19, 2007, 09:13:16 PM
No one is broadcasting or streaming 1080p. It's too big.  The CW seems to be that it will be a long time before anyone broadcasts 1080p stuff. The only real reason to get it is for HD-DVD or Blu-Ray. A 720p set will downscale those sources to its own resolution just fine though.

The reason why you would put up with that with plasma is that the picture for TV or movies (as opposed to gaming) is just better than the LCD (and at a lower price per inch, but at 720p which doesn't matter for most). Blacks on LCD's are more gray than black because of how they work although the newer sets are working on that (like the locally dimming LED sets I mentioned earlier). You also get much more motion blur on LCDs that run below 120hz (i.e. almost all of them).  LCDs are also prone to "pillars," "banding" and "clouds" which are areas that show up like bars or blobs of off-color sections of the LCD. Some brands are worse than others. The Sharp's are notorious for this.

It's really not that big of an imposition to break it in. You just need to pay attention to what is playing and not watch 4:3 stuff (you stretch it) or play games with static images. Even then if you do that you can usually "wash" the screen.

There probably isn't a huge, huge difference between the two formats from a casual perspective. They both have pros-and-cons and it depends on the usage/type of room and looking closely at the brand you are going for.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: CmdrSlack on August 19, 2007, 09:25:06 PM
I'm thinking that I'm in a pretty lowish price bracket, so have been looking at the smaller tube HDs. I'm not 100% sure this shelving system will hold a TV much beyond 30", and I can find stuff in the 27" to 32" range for 450-550. I'm currently using a SD 20" widescreen tube setup and it's fine, but the R/W/Y inputs on it are hosed for my PS2. I still want to get a 360, so it seems that I'm stuck buying a tube set unless I want to save for a flat set....

Is there any real reason to go with the flat screen models besides form factor? I'd like to finally get a 360, and a price tag above the mid 500s is going to be tough to sell to the wife.

Her take on it is, "Well, this TV works just fine, so why fuck around?" (her exact words, TBH)

So yeah, help me get a slightly nicer TV (35") without worrying about the tensile strength of this shelving system we currently use for our main wall in the living room.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Lt.Dan on August 19, 2007, 09:58:34 PM
Her take on it is, "Well, this TV works just fine, so why fuck around?" (her exact words, TBH)

I had this conversation too :)  After some discussion my wife's only real issue was that she thought a big TV would look ugly.  So now we're getting a cabinet to hide it :P 

She was also really turned around by seeing one at a friends house.  Nice to watch and didn't look as ugly as she thought.



Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: pants on August 19, 2007, 10:19:25 PM
Her take on it is, "Well, this TV works just fine, so why fuck around?" (her exact words, TBH)

I had this conversation too :) 



Ironically, my wife is the one who raised with us the idea of getting a flatscreen for our new house.  Unfortunately, that got me thinking about the home entertainment system in general, and how my 7 year old 5.1-in-a-box really aint that crash hot, and how I should upgrade my sound system.  That one is proving a harder sell (Im having to deal with 'Why change the stereo?  Sound comes out - what else do you want?').  And I haven't even dared mention how much decent speakers cost...


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: schild on August 19, 2007, 10:34:30 PM
Westinghouse TV are good and cheep. I am sure there are better but the feel from the community is good and cheep. As in good value. If you want better then fine. The question was "tell me more about the media center". The PC , the storage, And for gods sake "THE VID CARD" you gotta drive that bad boy with something.

Well, that's where Vizio comes in. Vizio is better and in the EXACT SAME price range.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Kitsune on August 20, 2007, 01:05:43 AM
Do not heed that chart if you mean to do anything videogameish on the TV.  I can very easily discern the difference between 720p and 1080p on my 40-inch TV from twelve feet away, it's every bit as obvious as the difference between 800x600 and 1024x768 on a 17" monitor.  720p games still have some jaggies, while 1080p is utterly razor sharp.

For video, yeah, the difference is much less marked.  Unless you paused a movie, you'd be hard-pressed to pick out the difference.  And broadcast HDTV is only 720p or 1080i due to bandwidth constraints, so that's not even a factor.

And as for the 'Bravia engine', it's just marketing-speak for image processing that is supposed to make the picture brighter, but which actually makes it look like crap and needs to be disabled if you want the picture to actually look good.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 20, 2007, 05:24:53 AM
This won't likely be a PC gaming TV. I was more interested in repurposing a dormant PC to drive movies, music, and photos through it. I've already got my gaming PC in an environment that doesn't cut into my wife's General Hospital and Extreme Home Makeover. It's also why I don't have a gaming console yet, though that will come in time.

Good points on the differences in Plasma display and LCD. I did notice some wierd artifacting (if that's the right word, cribbed from photo stuff) on the LCD displays. And while the store environments are designed to make LCDs look nice and crisp, anyone who's spent any time with an LCD gaming monitor can see what they think passes for black.

Thanks also for clarifying Vizio and Westinghouse. Good to know it's not all about the Sony/Toshiba/LG names.

Quote from: Abagadro
It's really not that big of an imposition to break it in. You just need to pay attention to what is playing and not watch 4:3 stuff (you stretch it) or play games with static images. Even then if you do that you can usually "wash" the screen.
The price on the Westinghouse Plasma at BB was certainly right. However, I abhor watching stuff stretched. You mentioned earlier a DVD that can do this. I would love to pick up a TV soon-ish, so just have a few more newbie/stupid questions:

  • Is the "damage" to the screen something that builds over time? Or is there some ratio between X time on and Y time off where the screen gets back to "normal"? We watch about 2-3 hours of TV a day, mostly at night in one long sitting, on channels that appear to all be offered in HD by my cable provider.
  • How does the DVD work? Do you run it for 10 hours over night? Throw the TV in the basement for 200 hours straight?
  • What's the expect lifespan of a Plasma and how much does that 200 cut into it? And is it different from LCD by much?


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Murgos on August 20, 2007, 05:39:25 AM
No one I know has purposefully burned in their plasma's.  No one I know has any issues related to that either.

That said I have a DLP.  It's wonderful.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Arrrgh on August 20, 2007, 06:39:25 AM
DLPs have zero burn in issues. Leave a game/image from a movie paused a week if you want.

The samsung thin DLPs are about 7 inches deep. My DLP sits on a stand and looks flat from the front. If you stand beside it you notice it's not flat, but how much time do you really spend standing beside your TV pondering it's thickness?

There are no break in rituals required for DLPs.

I don't think they make then in 40", but check them out if you decide to go larger. I have nothing against plasma or LCD, it's just a shame when people write off DLPs because they're not "flat".




Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 20, 2007, 07:03:32 AM
I love the DLP picture but haven't seen sets smaller than 47". Saving that for if we get into a bigger house.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Sky on August 20, 2007, 07:54:21 AM
Samsung DLP. I'd recommend the LED-lit versions coming out now, but that's a bit more expensive. A 50" would be about in your price range, though. You know I effing love my DLP. If size is a deal, you should think about it some more. Seriously, when I got the 60" I thought it was ridiculous, but in reality, it's perfect. I'm in a tiny apartment (pic from gaming area thread (http://farm1.static.flickr.com/211/512239224_e1002da7a2_o.jpg)). My father thought the same thing about the size, got a smaller set and it's so tiny it's still like watching movies on a tv set, it's a waste of money to buy a small hdtv imo. If your intention is to watch HD movies, I STRONGLY suggest you get a big tv.

I wouldn't look at another set beyond DLP. Plasma is nice, but they play wonky with pixels. DLP doesn't burnin, my 60" set weighs 107lbs (the new LED engine sets weigh about 97lbs). They're not 'flat', but it's only about 12" wide and it tapers out to hit that for only a little bit. Just noticed my neighbor, a Time Warner line tech, has the same set. Had his door open last night when I walked past and the back is unmistakable.
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Her take on it is, "Well, this TV works just fine, so why fuck around?" (her exact words, TBH)
That's what all my friends said about my 30" SD CRT I had. It's why I bought the HDTV before I got engaged. Now she's spoiled, too. I don't know if you like music, but being able to watch concerts in HD at 60" is incredible, not to mention the clarity in movies at that size, and I have a 720p set. Actually, the 720p res works in my favor for gaming at this point, too, since 1920x1080 is a lot of pixels to push even now.

I also feel strongly if you go to HDTV you need to game on it!

As for HDPC, avsforum is the place to do research. Sure, they like to focus on the high end, but you can't beat the resources there. Personally, I kind of think it's a waste at this point. Afaik (and I haven't looked in a long time, honestly) there's not a good HD HTPC setup on the market unless you do OTA (antenna, over-the-air). I just use the HD DVR from the cable company, though I do watch DVDs from my pc on the tv. Blu-Ray is still stupid expensive, you'd be better off with a PS3, still (which I think is the point).

Jobs could corner the market if he can get a Blu-Ray player/burner in a mac imo.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 20, 2007, 08:45:12 AM
I'd love a 60". The room is big enough. The problem is the layout. Two walls are windows (one with a fireplace) and the other two open into the kitchen and dining room. Even 42" is a stretch. I was trying to talk my wife into covering the fireplace with a temporary wall. We never use the stupid thing, being more the patio/chiminea types. That was a major no-go. She'd rather clean it out and put some candle contraption in there.

I don't mind much though. If not for her, the house would still be nuetral-tone walls, crappy carpet, no photos nor curtains, a pool table in the dining room, chinese in the fridge...


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: schild on August 20, 2007, 08:49:44 AM
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I don't mind much though. If not for her, the house would still be nuetral-tone walls, crappy carpet, no photos nor curtains, a pool table in the dining room, chinese in the fridge...

So, what you're saying is, you'd have bought a $4,000 TV instead of a $2,000 one. Rite.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: MrHat on August 20, 2007, 08:59:04 AM
Don't get a DLP.  Get something that's thin and can hang on the wall.

Don't listen to anyone re: 720p and 1080p.  Get 1080p.  We're past the time that it matters.  In terms of viewing distance, if you go back 2.5x the diagonal, you might not notice the difference between 720p and 1080p, but move in closer than that and there is a difference. 

Also, make sure that the TV does 1:1 mapping.  This shouldn't be an issue, and is most likely a problem regarding the STB, but some TV's stretch everything and it sucks.

Westinghouse fucking blows if you are near the screen at all.  I have a 27" in the bedroom and it's only good from like 15'.

Samsung LCD's are pimp.  Esp. in a room w/ windows.  IMO - go to a Best Buy or Circuit City or some commission-place during the day when it's slow and have salespeeps move stuff around for you and judge for yourself.

Edit: As for MCenter, AVS is the place to go.  Also, didn't Righ or someone have a thread on that a while back?


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 20, 2007, 09:03:26 AM
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I don't mind much though. If not for her, the house would still be nuetral-tone walls, crappy carpet, no photos nor curtains, a pool table in the dining room, chinese in the fridge...

So, what you're saying is, you'd have bought a $4,000 TV instead of a $2,000 one. Rite.

Nope. Woulda stuck with the $2k TV. It'd just be bigger because I would have nuked that Fireplace, or hung it from the ceiling to cover the entrance ot the kitchen, or some such.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: murdoc on August 20, 2007, 09:25:48 AM

Don't listen to anyone re: 720p and 1080p.  Get 1080p.  We're past the time that it matters.  In terms of viewing distance, if you go back 2.5x the diagonal, you might not notice the difference between 720p and 1080p, but move in closer than that and there is a difference. 


Anything under 50"? You will probably not notice a difference between 1080 and 720. Anything over 50", definitely get 1080.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: schild on August 20, 2007, 09:28:38 AM
I would get 1080p for anything over 30". Yes, the difference is obvious.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Rasix on August 20, 2007, 09:29:33 AM
I know I open myself up to ridicule from every videophile on the board, but  this (http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&productId=8198552921665087673) was the fruits of my negotiations.  My goals in getting a new TV were simple, I wanted HD for football and for gaming.  1080p wasn't a deal breaker.  Sure, I wanted a 47" TV with 1080p for eventual PS3 gaming, but that tended to clash with my wife's goals of: fit in the same space as the old 35" tube tv, require minimal furniture changes, not large (40" max), not expensive, and a recognizable brand name.  We saw this in Best Buy and the response from my wife was very positive and instead of dragging out the TV search longer (and having to play more Dead Rising with tiny text); we got that and a simple stand.

It works though.  3 component, 3 composite, 2 HDMI.  Weighs nothing. It looks fantastic and I'm very happy with it.  I don't think a lot of what people seem to be concerned with here I would notice while playing my 360 or watching football/other HD programming.

I ended up saving some cash, getting my HD, avoiding $1k of additional furniture costs, and keeping my wife completely happy with the purchase.  Now I got to work on sound upgrades.  Unfortunately the new TV doesn't fit with what we had.  Another day perhaps, I'm happy for now. 

Addendum: I have not even seen 1080p yet.  720p seems good enough for me at the distance I watch TV/game at. Schild, do you even have a 1080p set yet? 


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: WayAbvPar on August 20, 2007, 09:45:30 AM
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I know I open myself up to ridicule from every videophile on the board, but  this was the fruits of my negotiations.


Awwww, what a cute widdle TV!  :-P

I have the 60" Sony Grand Wega. Only thing I have seen in 1080p is my 360, but holy fuck that is pretty. Always buy the biggest bestest TV you can afford and fit in your space! I think I have room for a 107", but that will have to wait a bit. Probably until I win the WSOP or something.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Merusk on August 20, 2007, 09:57:46 AM
I would get 1080p for anything over 30". Yes, the difference is obvious.

I went out with my Mom this weekend shopping to get an HDTV for my Dad's b-day on Friday.  I'll agree with Schild on this, you do notice a difference between the 1080 and 720 at at least 37" (which is what we were looking for.)   Given the difference I saw in picture res at 37" I could see it making a difference at as low as 30" easily.




Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 20, 2007, 05:03:37 PM

  • Is the "damage" to the screen something that builds over time? Or is there some ratio between X time on and Y time off where the screen gets back to "normal"? We watch about 2-3 hours of TV a day, mostly at night in one long sitting, on channels that appear to all be offered in HD by my cable provider.
  • How does the DVD work? Do you run it for 10 hours over night? Throw the TV in the basement for 200 hours straight?
  • What's the expect lifespan of a Plasma and how much does that 200 cut into it? And is it different from LCD by much?

It's not something that builds over time. In fact, the more broken in the set, the less likely there is IR retention because the phosphors can reset easier. It's things like playing a sports game for a long time and having the static scoreboard image in the same place for a long time. Or having TV with the black bars on it for several hours. Really, it is just a break-in thing. Or just having it too bright as the setting out the box are completely wrong. You just have to be careful for the first bit. The newer sets have things like pixel-shift that moves the pixels around to prevent it, plus internal wash screens that get rid of IR.

The DVD is just something you can play to break it in. A lot of people just use any old DVD that has lots of changing stuff (like Planet Earth) and make sure that it is in full-screen.  Most people just try to be careful in their viewing habits. If you actually buy a TV, it would be worth your while to read the avsforums on this topic to protect your investment and get a proper calibration.

Half-lives (the time before it is one-half as bright as the day you bought it) on modern plasmas are in the tens of thousands of hours, so 200 hours is a drop in the bucket.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Sky on August 21, 2007, 06:32:43 AM
Or get a DLP :P


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 21, 2007, 06:40:07 AM
Find me one at 37" :-P

Thanks Abagadro. This is good food for thought. 90% of TV viewing in my house is by my wife. She wouldn't put up with that noise :) So I'll dig in a bit.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 26, 2007, 06:41:38 AM
I would get 1080p for anything over 30". Yes, the difference is obvious.

Last night Best Buy had an open-box Sony 32" 1080p hanging next to a bunch of 720p TVs. I was able to stand as far from them as I would be sitting in my living room. I definitely agree with you. It isn't a huge difference for some things (like their stock nature-channel bullshit). But it really becomes noticable on textures and text.

The only reason I didn't buy it is because after spending the last few days looking around, 37" is really the smallest I want to go. And for something like this, I'd rather not get open box unless they've got some way to prove it never left the store.

Saw a nice Westinghouse model, and while it was listed as 720p, it was showing the feed at 1080i. It looked pretty nice and the price was right. But just knowing 1080p is where I want to be sorta makes me not want anything less.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 26, 2007, 08:59:16 AM
Don't know if this size is what you are after, but Circuit City has an insane deal (http://www.circuitcity.com/rpsm/oid/161576/bundleId/12426/rpem/ccd/bundleDetail.do?linkid=j13459594k1971&affiliateid=k1971&mid=sduidp0t593062) right now on the Sharp 42" LCD. It includes a stand and white-glove install for several hundred dollars less than what the TV costs elsewhere.  This set has had some clouding issues in the past which were hit and miss (sorta a TV lottery) but I think they have been getting better lately. Pretty good reviews on amazon and elsewhere.


EDIT: That deal is now dead. It was at 1186 and is now at 1786. I wonder if it was a price mistake.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Trippy on August 26, 2007, 02:32:16 PM
I would get 1080p for anything over 30". Yes, the difference is obvious.
Last night Best Buy had an open-box Sony 32" 1080p hanging next to a bunch of 720p TVs. I was able to stand as far from them as I would be sitting in my living room. I definitely agree with you. It isn't a huge difference for some things (like their stock nature-channel bullshit). But it really becomes noticable on textures and text.
What Sony TV would that be? Sony doesn't make any 32" 1080P TVs AFAIK. Sharp is the only one making a 1080P LCD ATM and Sony's rear projection sets don't go that small.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 26, 2007, 03:28:25 PM
The store was near my in-laws house, four hours away now, so I'd need to call them to be sure. It was either a Sony or a Sharp, neither of which appear on the BB site, nor in the other two stores I checked since getting back home. I'm thinking this was some online order the purchaser returned to that particular store.

Quote from: Abagadro
EDIT: That deal is now dead. It was at 1186 and is now at 1786. I wonder if it was a price mistake.
You tease! :)


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 26, 2007, 04:16:05 PM
You snooze you lose!

The TV only is now at 1299 which is actually a decent deal in itself. You can also find 10% off coupons floating around too (I can help you find them if you are really interested).


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 26, 2007, 04:49:18 PM
I just cut a piece of foamcore to size. I'd love it but now I realize I need to be at 37" solid. The area is just too tight. This sucks. Maybe I'll just wait for the new house, unless I see a 1080p at 37" as part of the Christmas stock.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Rasix on August 26, 2007, 05:48:50 PM
Do you think you're really going to be watching that much 1080p to justify the price hike, especially if you're just going to be upgrading to a larger set later? You getting a PS3 soon or something (I thought someone mentioned the PC you had wouldn't be up for 1080p)?

edit: What I'm getting is, HD is kickass.  Just get your foot in the door if you have the opportunity.  Buy your ideal set later.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Abagadro on August 26, 2007, 07:27:50 PM
I just cut a piece of foamcore to size. I'd love it but now I realize I need to be at 37" solid. The area is just too tight. This sucks. Maybe I'll just wait for the new house, unless I see a 1080p at 37" as part of the Christmas stock.

Sharp makes a 37" 1080p LCD set. (http://www.amazon.com/Sharp-Aquos-LC37D62U-1080p-HDTV/dp/B000NEFWP6/ref=pd_bbs_2/105-7954323-9867658?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1188181599&sr=8-2)


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 27, 2007, 06:04:03 PM
Nice, thanks Abagadro.

Do you think you're really going to be watching that much 1080p to justify the price hike, especially if you're just going to be upgrading to a larger set later?

Given the housing market, I'm really not sure when I'll be upgrading. And given the expected plunge in price on Blu Ray, I'm actually thinking I'll be watching high def movies sooner rather than later.

What are networks broadcasting in these days? I thought someone mentioned it here but I can't find the number. 720p?


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Merusk on August 27, 2007, 06:55:39 PM
Yeah, someone else mentioned that broadcast is 720, but I think both satellite services broadcast in 1080.  At least DirecTV indicates they do on their FAQ, but I couldn't find it on Dish.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Trippy on August 27, 2007, 07:15:48 PM
Yeah, someone else mentioned that broadcast is 720, but I think both satellite services broadcast in 1080.  At least DirecTV indicates they do on their FAQ, but I couldn't find it on Dish.
Broadcast varies. CBS is 1080i. FOX is 720p. I can't remember what NBC and ABC are.

Edit: It looks like ABC is 720p and NBC 1080i.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 28, 2007, 05:44:00 AM
Any idea when/if they'll go full 1080p? It seems to be a question of being able to drive highdef video signal over the same lines carrying and network connection, but there was something someone wrote about how the two signals are mutually exclusive anyway. I can't find it, but it was something about how the cable was designed allows them to treat cable signal and internet stuff completely separately, allowing both to achieve full potential.

This wouldn't affect my purchase, just wondering is all.


Title: Re: Help me buy an HDTV and configure a Media Center
Post by: Venkman on August 28, 2007, 01:39:59 PM
I'm seeing what my problem is. I can't get myself to actually just stand 10' away from the TVs to compare them. And the local BB isn't set up for that. They have all the TVs down these four foot-wide aisles, so I'm like living in the pixels.

Having said that, I'm heavily leaning towards a 40" Samsung 1080p set (one of the newer generations that replaced that big round button on the bottom). It's a bit above my initial price range, but from all the discussion here and the viewings I've had, I'm beginning to think my $1k range was on the low side for what I truly wanted. I'm also realizing that even if my old rig can't drive 1080p content, the 1080p gives me the pixels roughly equivalent to what I'm used to looking at on my PC, so at least may be good enough for low-end MMOing my couch.

After we learn whether Sam is going to be successful at seducing Lucky :P