When I said standard def, I meant mainly free to air analogue television. Progressive DVD should look okay (in fact in Australia, 480p/576p is considered "high definition" by the government standards here, believe it or not).
I don't know, maybe I've just gotten used to watching everything in 720p (I have a upscaling DVD player as well)
Another factor is digital standard def broadcasts that aren't given enough bitrate - our cable TV supplier here in Australia offers absolutely shocking quality because of this, and watching the World Cup recently through it, it really was worse than VCD - I was literally watching a team of compression artifacts playing against another team of compression artifacts. Luckily, the same broadcast is available on free-to-air "high definition" (576p) digital, so I didn't have to suffer too much
Basically, anything with digital artifacts or analogue noise on a large screen equals a horrible picture that people wouldn't normally notice on a smaller screen.
I don't know, maybe I've just gotten used to watching everything in 720p (I have a upscaling DVD player as well)
Another factor is digital standard def broadcasts that aren't given enough bitrate - our cable TV supplier here in Australia offers absolutely shocking quality because of this, and watching the World Cup recently through it, it really was worse than VCD - I was literally watching a team of compression artifacts playing against another team of compression artifacts. Luckily, the same broadcast is available on free-to-air "high definition" (576p) digital, so I didn't have to suffer too much
Basically, anything with digital artifacts or analogue noise on a large screen equals a horrible picture that people wouldn't normally notice on a smaller screen.
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