Displaying full 1080P with the Xbox360

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pockets187

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#1 pockets187
Member since 2004 • 281 Posts

I know there is no HDMI or DV I hookup for the xbox360 yet there is only the VGA adapter.  I was thinking that if you have the VGA adapter and buy a VGA to HDMI, or VGA to DVI connecter it should allow one to watch their games or HD-DVD movies in 1080P.

What do you guys think?  Has anyone tried this already?

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waldot

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#2 waldot
Member since 2003 • 1470 Posts
Bump.......I'd really like to know.......and I was just at the local EB Games and they said that in order to get 1080P...you definately need the hdmi......but I read on one of these forums , that some other setup works.....and as long as there's two ppl.....there will be two opinions.......so.....forget the opinions and lets have facts please
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deactivated-5f033ecf40fed

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#3 deactivated-5f033ecf40fed
Member since 2004 • 2665 Posts
EB Games employees seriously do not know what they're talking about most of the time. I had one ask me if Halo and Crackdown were for the PS3...
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ehacala

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#4 ehacala
Member since 2003 • 314 Posts
Bump.......I'd really like to know.......and I was just at the local EB Games and they said that in order to get 1080P...you definately need the hdmi......but I read on one of these forums , that some other setup works.....and as long as there's two ppl.....there will be two opinions.......so.....forget the opinions and lets have facts pleasewaldot


You DO NOT need HDMI to display 1080P. VGA or component work just fine depending on your TV. I have the VGA connected to my 1080P and it works fine.

When DRM gets deployed you may need HDMI ONLY for the the DRM that may be utilized.

For now you DO NOT need HDMI to display 1080P
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BIGDEE06

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#5 BIGDEE06
Member since 2006 • 2322 Posts
It depends on the kind of HDTV you have.  I have a Samsung HL-S6167W and it displays 1080p through component and VGA.
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SilV3RSix

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#6 SilV3RSix
Member since 2002 • 1722 Posts
VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice.
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jamesgj

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#7 jamesgj
Member since 2005 • 1190 Posts

It depends on the kind of HDTV you have.  I have a Samsung HL-S6167W and it displays 1080p through component and VGA.BIGDEE06
 

1080p with the Hd-dvd drive, only works via the VGA cable.

And about the question yes I'm currently using an VGA to HDMI I bought off ebay on a 1080p sony VW-50 Projector looks great.

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BIGDEE06

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#8 BIGDEE06
Member since 2006 • 2322 Posts

[QUOTE="BIGDEE06"]It depends on the kind of HDTV you have.  I have a Samsung HL-S6167W and it displays 1080p through component and VGA.jamesgj

 

1080p with the Hd-dvd drive, only works via the VGA cable.

And about the question yes I'm currently using an VGA to HDMI I bought off ebay on a 1080p sony VW-50 Projector looks great.

I don't have a HD-DVD drive, so I can't speak on it's behalf.
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jamesgj

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#9 jamesgj
Member since 2005 • 1190 Posts
[QUOTE="jamesgj"]

[QUOTE="BIGDEE06"]It depends on the kind of HDTV you have.  I have a Samsung HL-S6167W and it displays 1080p through component and VGA.BIGDEE06

 

1080p with the Hd-dvd drive, only works via the VGA cable.

And about the question yes I'm currently using an VGA to HDMI I bought off ebay on a 1080p sony VW-50 Projector looks great.

I don't have a HD-DVD drive, so I can't speak on it's behalf.

 

Well you are correct xbox 360 can display 1080p with the xbox 360 with or without the VGA cable just wondering if you we're talking about the Hd-dvd drive. That only can achive 1080p viga VGA cable.

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creekfan_basic

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#10 creekfan_basic
Member since 2002 • 2539 Posts

VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice. SilV3RSix

don't know how to respond to this one...1080p is 1920x1080 at 60 frames...not 1280x1024 and the aspect is 16:9 not 4:3.

The VGA and component can do 1080p just fine, if your TV will allow it....most Samsung TV's will do full 1080p via component and VGA but for some reason even with a Samsung the HD-DVD drive tops out at 1080i via component so for most VGA is needed if you want full 1080p and with the VGA cable the 360 will upscale DVD's to 720p.

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BIGDEE06

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#11 BIGDEE06
Member since 2006 • 2322 Posts
[QUOTE="BIGDEE06"][QUOTE="jamesgj"]

[QUOTE="BIGDEE06"]It depends on the kind of HDTV you have.  I have a Samsung HL-S6167W and it displays 1080p through component and VGA.jamesgj

 

1080p with the Hd-dvd drive, only works via the VGA cable.

And about the question yes I'm currently using an VGA to HDMI I bought off ebay on a 1080p sony VW-50 Projector looks great.

I don't have a HD-DVD drive, so I can't speak on it's behalf.

 

Well you are correct xbox 360 can display 1080p with the xbox 360 with or without the VGA cable just wondering if you we're talking about the Hd-dvd drive. That only can achive 1080p viga VGA cable.

Thanks for the info.  I have a vga input on the back of my HDTV, so now I know that i'll need the VGA cable to acheive 1080p w/ the HD-DVD drive(if I get it).
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blacktorn

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#12 blacktorn
Member since 2004 • 8299 Posts
won't work
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jmartinez1983

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#13 jmartinez1983
Member since 2006 • 3949 Posts
won't workblacktorn
Excellent point! Anyways, as a rule most TVs will need the VGA cables to do 1080p on the 360 for now.
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CradleXX

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#14 CradleXX
Member since 2005 • 2820 Posts
A lot can do it with component.
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ehacala

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#15 ehacala
Member since 2003 • 314 Posts

[QUOTE="SilV3RSix"]VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice. creekfan_basic

don't know how to respond to this one...1080p is 1920x1080 at 60 frames...not 1280x1024 and the aspect is 16:9 not 4:3.

The VGA and component can do 1080p just fine, if your TV will allow it....most Samsung TV's will do full 1080p via component and VGA but for some reason even with a Samsung the HD-DVD drive tops out at 1080i via component so for most VGA is needed if you want full 1080p and with the VGA cable the 360 will upscale DVD's to 720p.



Bang on.....

Please listen to this guy as he seems to know what he is talking about.
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ehacala

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#16 ehacala
Member since 2003 • 314 Posts

[QUOTE="SilV3RSix"]VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice. creekfan_basic

don't know how to respond to this one...1080p is 1920x1080 at 60 frames...not 1280x1024 and the aspect is 16:9 not 4:3.

The VGA and component can do 1080p just fine, if your TV will allow it....most Samsung TV's will do full 1080p via component and VGA but for some reason even with a Samsung the HD-DVD drive tops out at 1080i via component so for most VGA is needed if you want full 1080p and with the VGA cable the 360 will upscale DVD's to 720p.



Bang On....

Please listen to this guy as he knows what is going on......

Thanks for the accurate information. Most of the stuff posted here is not accurate at all.
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dreamscott

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#17 dreamscott
Member since 2002 • 1940 Posts

VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice. SilV3RSix

Dude, what are you talking about.. How could it be 4:3????

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goddchocula

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#18 goddchocula
Member since 2003 • 25 Posts

[QUOTE="SilV3RSix"]VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice. creekfan_basic

don't know how to respond to this one...1080p is 1920x1080 at 60 frames...not 1280x1024 and the aspect is 16:9 not 4:3.

The VGA and component can do 1080p just fine, if your TV will allow it....most Samsung TV's will do full 1080p via component and VGA but for some reason even with a Samsung the HD-DVD drive tops out at 1080i via component so for most VGA is needed if you want full 1080p and with the VGA cable the 360 will upscale DVD's to 720p.

listen to this guy.  I have a sammy and it does 1080p really well over component.  The picture actually sucked using the vga adapter.

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e1even20

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#19 e1even20
Member since 2007 • 183 Posts
I thought that the 1080p was just upconverted on the 360, and not really a true 1080p picture?
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Large_Soda

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#20 Large_Soda
Member since 2003 • 8658 Posts
I thought that the 1080p was just upconverted on the 360, and not really a true 1080p picture?e1even20
Well it is taking the 720p game and converting it to 1080p and that is because the games as of now do not support native 1080p. But Virtua Tennis 3 will change all that.
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JohnWinger

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#21 JohnWinger
Member since 2007 • 1903 Posts

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

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maxxorz

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#22 maxxorz
Member since 2006 • 555 Posts
I use Component and i get 1080p...... for the games that use it. most games only go as high as 720p anyway... so i doesnt really matter.
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highvolts12

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#23 highvolts12
Member since 2003 • 460 Posts

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

JohnWinger


HAHAHAHAHAHAHA nice try though.  Here's a link.
http://www.xbox.com/en-US/community/news/2006/1030-novemberupdate-completelist.htm

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JohnWinger

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#24 JohnWinger
Member since 2007 • 1903 Posts
[QUOTE="JohnWinger"]

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

highvolts12


HAHAHAHAHAHAHA nice try though.  Here's a link.
http://www.xbox.com/en-US/community/news/2006/1030-novemberupdate-completelist.htm

Find one TV that supports 1080p via component.

You can't.

They don't exist.

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clubside

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#25 clubside
Member since 2004 • 667 Posts

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

JohnWinger

And you are why people don't ask Best Buy workers for help.

HDTV is a broadcast standard that is neither analog nor digital. RGB is analog and already achieves even higher than 1080P resolutions, has for years.

1080P over Component is becoming standard, but currently in't. I did my research (which certainly did not include asking Best Buy employees) before picking my Samsung 61" 1080P DLP (which is advertised for $2,599 in the current Best Buy circular) which supports 1080P over component.

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ps2plusoneis3

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#26 ps2plusoneis3
Member since 2006 • 110 Posts

[QUOTE="waldot"]Bump.......I'd really like to know.......and I was just at the local EB Games and they said that in order to get 1080P...you definately need the hdmi......but I read on one of these forums , that some other setup works.....and as long as there's two ppl.....there will be two opinions.......so.....forget the opinions and lets have facts pleaseehacala


You DO NOT need HDMI to display 1080P. VGA or component work just fine depending on your TV. I have the VGA connected to my 1080P and it works fine.

When DRM gets deployed you may need HDMI ONLY for the the DRM that may be utilized.

For now you DO NOT need HDMI to display 1080P

i have a 42" sharp and i can get gears on 1080p without an hdmi cable

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clubside

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#27 clubside
Member since 2004 • 667 Posts
Find one TV that supports 1080p via component.

You can't.

They don't exist.JohnWinger

Here's the Best Buy link:

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?skuId=7705897&type=product&productCategoryId=pcmcat95100050004&id=1138085317167

Here's the Samsung link to their page (and from there you can download the PDF of the manual) which shows 1080P in the Appendix over Component (and which I can verify in that I am an owner and am using 1080P over Component as I type this on my 360):

http://www.samsung.com/Products/TV/DLPTV/HLS6187WXXAA.asp

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ProjectPat187

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#28 ProjectPat187
Member since 2005 • 2178 Posts
[QUOTE="highvolts12"][QUOTE="JohnWinger"]

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

JohnWinger


HAHAHAHAHAHAHA nice try though.  Here's a link.
http://www.xbox.com/en-US/community/news/2006/1030-novemberupdate-completelist.htm

Find one TV that supports 1080p via component.

You can't.

They don't exist.

u don't know what the hell ur talking about
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sumitalianguy11

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#29 sumitalianguy11
Member since 2006 • 39 Posts
but does the hd dvd player still work over component 1080p or do you still need a vga hookup to get 1080p 100%
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creekfan_basic

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#30 creekfan_basic
Member since 2002 • 2539 Posts

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

JohnWinger

My god people, stop posting if you don't know what you are talking about.......most of the 7th generation Samsung DLP's will do 1080p via component. You don't need a digital signal to get 1080p, 1080p has been done on PC's for years now, and guess what, most of those monitors are analog in nature.....get a clue, and saying you work for Best Buy means nothing as the majority of the people I talk to at Best Buy know squat about technology. They do know one thing though, how to dup people into buying $100 HDMI cables that are a complete waste of money.

I don't know why people still think you have to have HDMI to do 1080p, it has nothing to do with being digital or analog, its a resolution setting.....

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creekfan_basic

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#31 creekfan_basic
Member since 2002 • 2539 Posts

but does the hd dvd player still work over component 1080p or do you still need a vga hookup to get 1080p 100%sumitalianguy11

The HD-DVD player will work fine over component, though it maxes out at 1080i for some reason, a hardware setting in the HD-DVD drive probably.

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Large_Soda

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#32 Large_Soda
Member since 2003 • 8658 Posts

[QUOTE="sumitalianguy11"]but does the hd dvd player still work over component 1080p or do you still need a vga hookup to get 1080p 100%creekfan_basic

The HD-DVD player will work fine over component, though it maxes out at 1080i for some reason, a hardware setting in the HD-DVD drive probably.

You need the VGA cable to achieve 1080p with the HD DVD add-on.
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#33 SilV3RSix
Member since 2002 • 1722 Posts

[QUOTE="SilV3RSix"]VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice. creekfan_basic

don't know how to respond to this one...1080p is 1920x1080 at 60 frames...not 1280x1024 and the aspect is 16:9 not 4:3.

The VGA and component can do 1080p just fine, if your TV will allow it....most Samsung TV's will do full 1080p via component and VGA but for some reason even with a Samsung the HD-DVD drive tops out at 1080i via component so for most VGA is needed if you want full 1080p and with the VGA cable the 360 will upscale DVD's to 720p.

*sigh*... The difference is the 16:9 HDTV standard mixing with the VGA 4:3 standard. However your TV is designed to interface with it's VGA port (this is where it's native resolution can rear it's ugly head)is what you are left with, but it will attempt to translate it into something similar to the major HD signals, i.e- 480p, 720, 1080p. Some TV's do a better job than others, and Samsungs are known to wash out the colors due to some factory calibration issues. That doesn't mean the signal isn't close to 1080p, however, and you can fix those settings yourself if you care to take some risks. If you don't believe me, check out the link above to the Samsung product, then to its PDF, page 102. Theres a chart with supported VESA modes (VGA cable)...1024 X 768, 1152 X 864, 1280 X 960, 1280 X 1024, 1600 X 1200, and the new 1900 X 1200. NONE of those are true 720 or 1080p... But there are equivalents.
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pockets187

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#34 pockets187
Member since 2004 • 281 Posts

Thanks for all the info guys.  The TV i have is the Mitsubishi LT46231 Diamond 46" LCD HDTV which they have on the Tweeter website.  I have the HD-DVD add on and when I watch HD-DVD's on my system with the component it only shows up as 1080I not 1080P.  The main reason I was looking to see if you could use the VGA with a VGA to DVI or VGA to HDMI is simply because my TV does not support VGA. 

Also when I try and change the settings on my 360 to 1080P it doesn't work and defaults back to the prior settings. I would love to be able to get the full quality of my TV for my gaming that actually allows 1080P but also my watching of movies in HD.

If someone knows how I can get the full 1080P out of my set up I would def appreciate it.

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dreamscott

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#35 dreamscott
Member since 2002 • 1940 Posts

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

JohnWinger

Haha, Your the reason why Best Buy employees get paid $10 an hour..

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JoLOveS

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#36 JoLOveS
Member since 2003 • 364 Posts
BTW 1080p is highly overrated, I play on 720p and Gears looks amazing.
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dreamscott

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#37 dreamscott
Member since 2002 • 1940 Posts
How is it over rated, just because you don't have one??
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kidkit

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#38 kidkit
Member since 2005 • 2783 Posts
How is it over rated, just because you don't have one??dreamscott
I think i'd rather have a 50" 720p plasma then a 50" 1080p lcd =]
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goddchocula

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#39 goddchocula
Member since 2003 • 25 Posts

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

JohnWinger

Not sure why you are bragging that you work at best buy.  Can you actually afford any of the crap you sell?

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JoLOveS

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#40 JoLOveS
Member since 2003 • 364 Posts
How is it over rated, just because you don't have one??dreamscott


Do you have a decent sized TV that displays it? and contrast ratio and color are better ways to judge a picture than resolution and you wont see a difference over 720p unles your TV is more than 50" at wich point you will have to sit about 4' from the TV to see a difference which isnt big anyways. Oh and for the record the picture quality on Plasmas are many times better than LCD. LCD looks washed out as they are all backlight.
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kidkit

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#41 kidkit
Member since 2005 • 2783 Posts
Speaking of 720p and 1080p, CNET has a great new, brief article looking at the new 1080p plasmas versus their 720p (well... 768p) http://reviews.cnet.com/4321-6482_7-6558982-1.html?tag=prmo1
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JoLOveS

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#42 JoLOveS
Member since 2003 • 364 Posts
[QUOTE="Amee Abel and David Katzmaier, Senior Editor"]Ah, 1080p. If you haven't been keeping track, that number-and-letter combo refers to the native resolution--or physical pixel count--of the higher-end HDTVs on the market today. 1080p resolution is already well entrenched among rear-projection and flat-panel LCD HDTVs, but it's still relatively new among plasmas. We took a look at the two 50-inch 1080p plasmas on the market today, Pioneer's PRO-FHD1 and Panasonic's TH-50PF9UK, and compared them against their lower-resolution counterparts, namely the Pioneer PDP-5070HD and the Panasonic TH-50PH9UK. The verdict is pretty simple: unless you're sitting closer than about 7 feet from the screen, you won't see any difference in sharpness. Of course, in larger screen sizes 1080p will provide more of a benefit, but at 50 inches, it's just not that noticeable. The 1080p plasmas did score higher overall based on other merits, but we still give the overall nod--er, Editors' Choice--to the standard-resolution (aka 1366x768 or "768p") Pioneer PDP-5070HD. If you're looking for a bargain, meanwhile, the value champion remains the original Panasonic TH-50PH9UK. 



There you go.
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creekfan_basic

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#43 creekfan_basic
Member since 2002 • 2539 Posts
[QUOTE="creekfan_basic"]

[QUOTE="SilV3RSix"]VGA will do 1080p equivalent resolution (1280 x 1024), but the aspect ratio is 4:3 instead of 16:9... The detail will still be there. As far as HDMI converting- it's a digital signal so you'd actually need an Analog to Digital converter which would run you $200+. Not a good choice. SilV3RSix

don't know how to respond to this one...1080p is 1920x1080 at 60 frames...not 1280x1024 and the aspect is 16:9 not 4:3.

The VGA and component can do 1080p just fine, if your TV will allow it....most Samsung TV's will do full 1080p via component and VGA but for some reason even with a Samsung the HD-DVD drive tops out at 1080i via component so for most VGA is needed if you want full 1080p and with the VGA cable the 360 will upscale DVD's to 720p.

*sigh*... The difference is the 16:9 HDTV standard mixing with the VGA 4:3 standard. However your TV is designed to interface with it's VGA port (this is where it's native resolution can rear it's ugly head)is what you are left with, but it will attempt to translate it into something similar to the major HD signals, i.e- 480p, 720, 1080p. Some TV's do a better job than others, and Samsungs are known to wash out the colors due to some factory calibration issues. That doesn't mean the signal isn't close to 1080p, however, and you can fix those settings yourself if you care to take some risks. If you don't believe me, check out the link above to the Samsung product, then to its PDF, page 102. Theres a chart with supported VESA modes (VGA cable)...1024 X 768, 1152 X 864, 1280 X 960, 1280 X 1024, 1600 X 1200, and the new 1900 X 1200. NONE of those are true 720 or 1080p... But there are equivalents.

It's a good thing I know how to get into the calibration settings on the TV.....I read this and recalibrated since colors due to get washed out, but easily fixed if you know what you are doing. I missed what you really meant in your first post...post this first next time :D

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sm0ke311

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#44 sm0ke311
Member since 2006 • 1069 Posts

I know there is no HDMI or DV I hookup for the xbox360 yet there is only the VGA adapter.  I was thinking that if you have the VGA adapter and buy a VGA to HDMI, or VGA to DVI connecter it should allow one to watch their games or HD-DVD movies in 1080P.

What do you guys think?  Has anyone tried this already?

pockets187

there is HDMI DVI adapters coz i have one. 

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sm0ke311

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#45 sm0ke311
Member since 2006 • 1069 Posts
[QUOTE="highvolts12"][QUOTE="JohnWinger"]

Its impossible to display 1080p through component.

A component cable is an analog cable.

The only way to display 1080p is through a digital signal like HDMI.

By the way I work at Best Buy and we do not sell one TV that can display 1080p via component.

JohnWinger


HAHAHAHAHAHAHA nice try though.  Here's a link.
http://www.xbox.com/en-US/community/news/2006/1030-novemberupdate-completelist.htm

Find one TV that supports 1080p via component.

You can't.

They don't exist.

im using similar adapter with x360 and it works 1080p http://www.kab24.de/kabel/DVI-Adapter-DVI-I-Stecker-245-auf-Component-RGB-Radeon.html just put rgb in hook it with tv or monitor you will see.

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dreamscott

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#46 dreamscott
Member since 2002 • 1940 Posts

[QUOTE="dreamscott"]How is it over rated, just because you don't have one??JoLOveS


Do you have a decent sized TV that displays it? and contrast ratio and color are better ways to judge a picture than resolution and you wont see a difference over 720p unles your TV is more than 50" at wich point you will have to sit about 4' from the TV to see a difference which isnt big anyways. Oh and for the record the picture quality on Plasmas are many times better than LCD. LCD looks washed out as they are all backlight.

Dude, that is your opinion.. Some people actually like LCD's and DLP's. Second, I have a 1080p HDTV, I have a very good job. I am not bragging, I am simply stating that I have one. If I wanted to buy a 720p, I could have. I decided to go with the future and go 1080p. I love it. It looks amazing. My friend has a 720p HDTV and I hate to break it to you but there is a huge difference. 1080P looks a million times better, at any distance from the TV. I would love to know who started that distance rumor :|

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JoLOveS

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#47 JoLOveS
Member since 2003 • 364 Posts

[QUOTE="JoLOveS"][QUOTE="dreamscott"]How is it over rated, just because you don't have one??dreamscott



Do you have a decent sized TV that displays it? and contrast ratio and color are better ways to judge a picture than resolution and you wont see a difference over 720p unles your TV is more than 50" at wich point you will have to sit about 4' from the TV to see a difference which isnt big anyways. Oh and for the record the picture quality on Plasmas are many times better than LCD. LCD looks washed out as they are all backlight.

Dude, that is your opinion.. Some people actually like LCD's and DLP's. Second, I have a 1080p HDTV, I have a very good job. I am not bragging, I am simply stating that I have one. If I wanted to buy a 720p, I could have. I decided to go with the future and go 1080p. I love it. It looks amazing. My friend has a 720p HDTV and I hate to break it to you but there is a huge difference. 1080P looks a million times better, at any distance from the TV. I would love to know who started that distance rumor :|



Cnet, that's whom started that rumor.
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tkemory

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#50 tkemory
Member since 2002 • 2191 Posts

When are people on this forum going to learn to think for themselves?

Go to the store, look at the televisions and decide for yourself. When I was shopping for a television, I took the smaller Plasma screen for the same price into consideration, and looked at the picture on a plasma then on a DLP, then an LCD. Each display has strengths and weaknesses, you have to assess which appeal to you.

I personally can tell the difference between 720P and 1080P visually, for those that can't perhaps lasik? Its not hard to see the resolution and sharpness difference.

It gets old reading post about how Plasma is the best or LCD is the best. All of the technologies have weaknesses in how they display pictures, or how much they cost to get a minor enchancement to a feature.

To the OP. You have 2 options to get 1080 for movies on the 360, 3 options for games (keeping in mind most are being upscaled from 720P).

360 + Component or VGA or HDMI (Elite) = 1080P games (if game isnt 1080P native it will upscale)
360 + Component = 480P DVD, 1080i HD DVD (digital rights issue)
360 + VGA = 1080P DVD (upscaled), 1080P HD DVD, not all tvs will have VGA port and the signal is analog
360 + HDMI (elite) = 1080P DVD (upscaled), 1080P HD DVD native

Biggest problems with VGA is it tends to wash the colors out on most screens. There was a patch to fix this but my understanding is it does a poor job and some people still have the problem. I tried the VGA cable back before I the Elite came out, and didnt like the washed out look so went back to my component cables until I bought my Elite.