One of the greatest courtroom dramas ever made and one whose courtroom scenes still sizzle today more than fifty years later, Otto Preminger’s Anatomy of a Murder is a one-of-a-kind showcase for...
Rainer Werner Fassbinder had only been making feature films for four years when he tackled the enormous miniseries version of World on a Wire. Filmed in two parts totaling over three and a half...
A kind of low budget combination of Jules Dassin’s The Naked City and William Wyler’s Detective Story, Arnold Laven’s Vice Squad offers an entertaining West Coast twist to the police work shown...
The Phantom of the Opera gets a great showcase on Blu-ray with this performance at the Royal Albert Hall last October, in honor of its 25th anniversary. Like last year’s Blu-ray of Les...
After scoring as an international sensation and winning six 2011 Emmy Awards, Downton Abbey became last season’s most buzzed about new show (curiously, the first season won no major prizes in...
I want to get a 360. I currently have a 42-inch LCD with HDMI ports. Is there a noticeable difference in visual quality by using HDMI vs. some other inputs for the 360?
Re: Does HDMI make much difference with the Xbox 360?
From what I understand,I don't think you would notice a difference. I read that if you had two 42 inch sets side by side,one at 720p , and one at 1080p ,the average guy probably could not see the difference. The difference however ,would be more noticeable if you were seeing the image on say, a screen size of 100" or more.
Re: Does HDMI make much difference with the Xbox 360?
No you will not see a difrence unless you have the HD DVD drive.. but as far as games go componet cables have plenty enough bandwith to run 720p there will be no improvment running hdmi on games.
Re: Does HDMI make much difference with the Xbox 360?
I have tired both component and HDMI using Halo 3 on my set--a 50" Panasonic PX75U--and the difference is night and day with HDMI having a far superior picture.
Not that the component picture was bad. It's just that with component the picture seemed to have an overall haze. Blacks were more of a dark gray, the picture seemed softer, and lighting effects didn't have as much pop.
At first I hooked up the 360 (premium no HD-DVD) with HDMI. I don't have an HDMI capable receiver so I was running an HDMI cable to the TV and an optical cable out of the TV to the receiver. Unfortunately this was only passing a stereo signal (re: no DD 5.1). But the picture was phenomenal. Almost life-like.
Because of the lack of 5.1 audio I thought I would use the component dongle (with 5.1 out) so I could have the great picture with 5.1 audio. My wife who could really care less about this stuff immediately commented: "Eww. What happened to the picture?"
The picture was good but the HDMI-genie was already out of the bottle, so to speak. I immediately yanked out the component and went back to HDMI with absolutely no regrets.
Your mileage may vary with a different display, but on my system, HDMI is the crystal-clear winner. It's not even close.