I didn't state that it was accurate or a great idea, but if the individual program "claims" to be in HD, and it's broadcast at an increased resolution, then that's probably how they calculated it. My TV upscales everything anyway, so to take your statement one step further EVERYTHING I see is "HD". However, the statements were "why is it showing as 100% when it isn't", and I bet it's calculated on the claim. The claim, sadly, is based on the resolution that's puked out and not by how well the content was transferred to it. This is a lot like the first HD DVD and Blu-Ray movies I saw with the horrible graining and blurring.
So, technically, the site is "correct" but a bit sad as well...
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Student Driver @ Mar 14th 2008 4:09PM
I didn't state that it was accurate or a great idea, but if the individual program "claims" to be in HD, and it's broadcast at an increased resolution, then that's probably how they calculated it. My TV upscales everything anyway, so to take your statement one step further EVERYTHING I see is "HD". However, the statements were "why is it showing as 100% when it isn't", and I bet it's calculated on the claim. The claim, sadly, is based on the resolution that's puked out and not by how well the content was transferred to it. This is a lot like the first HD DVD and Blu-Ray movies I saw with the horrible graining and blurring.
So, technically, the site is "correct" but a bit sad as well...