I've made a few observations regarding the HD scene, and I wanted to post them here. Maybe I'm right, or maybe I'm wrong, and maybe there is even more to learn about "Buying in to High-Definition".
For those buying HD Camcorders: When cameras boast "Full HD" or "True HD" that probably mean next-to-nothing. Most HD cameras (true, full, or vanilla) shoot 1920x1024 29.9fps interlaced (as in only 540 actual horizontal lines of video each frame) video. Also, a camera that says it shoots in 1920 HD is no better than the camera that shoots in 1024 HD, one is just advertising the lines that it writes across and the other the lines that it writes down. Gimic?
For those buying HD Tapes: Most or all HD footage that can be shot on a DV tape can be shot on any DV tape, and you do not need to buy special tapes that specify "HD Compatibility". Gimic?
For those buying HD Televisions: If you want to pick up those free HD broadcast signals, you do not need a special "HD Ready" antenna. All regular television antennas are capable of receiving HD signals. Gimic?
For those buying HD Camcorders: When cameras boast "Full HD" or "True HD" that probably mean next-to-nothing. Most HD cameras (true, full, or vanilla) shoot 1920x1024 29.9fps interlaced (as in only 540 actual horizontal lines of video each frame) video. Also, a camera that says it shoots in 1920 HD is no better than the camera that shoots in 1024 HD, one is just advertising the lines that it writes across and the other the lines that it writes down. Gimic?
For those buying HD Tapes: Most or all HD footage that can be shot on a DV tape can be shot on any DV tape, and you do not need to buy special tapes that specify "HD Compatibility". Gimic?
For those buying HD Televisions: If you want to pick up those free HD broadcast signals, you do not need a special "HD Ready" antenna. All regular television antennas are capable of receiving HD signals. Gimic?