You're missing one fact: these projectors aren't widescreen. Those TV's are.
So, with the TV's you linked, the pixels aren't square. You do REALLY get 768 pixels of vertical resolution when watching a widescreen source, but on the horizontal axis, you get 1024 "stretched" pixels.
On the other hand, these projectors are (as far as I can tell) 4:3 only. So, a widescreen source must be letterboxed down to less than 768 pixels high. Like I said, all the way down to 576 Standard-Def pixels.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
EQC @ Jan 29th 2008 9:38PM
You're missing one fact: these projectors aren't widescreen. Those TV's are.
So, with the TV's you linked, the pixels aren't square. You do REALLY get 768 pixels of vertical resolution when watching a widescreen source, but on the horizontal axis, you get 1024 "stretched" pixels.
On the other hand, these projectors are (as far as I can tell) 4:3 only. So, a widescreen source must be letterboxed down to less than 768 pixels high. Like I said, all the way down to 576 Standard-Def pixels.