smooth4lyfe
Trusted Member
- Sep 16, 2012
- 5,534
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Meh, don't need that, just music and SoundHound came with my Android so I just SoundHound.Shazam is way better, now u can Shazam a TV show and it can show you what TV show and information about the show its cool!
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy S3 Boyyyyyy!
I'm sorry, but to be frank you simply don't know what you're talking about. I guess you'd claim that 720p flat panel televisions aren't "True/Full HD" either, and you'd be wrong about that too. I'm a professional engineer, with a pretty good background and understanding of television technology, so your attempt to dismiss me as a "tech noob" is laughable at best. :-[ 720p is "True/Full HD" as are 1080i and 1080p. That's not spin (unlike your opinion) but simple fact, based on the published specifications for HD broadcast formats.
And I'm not trying to justify anything. I didn't weigh in on which phone is "better" and agree that for some the S3 is, and for others they'll like the iPhone 5 better. Just trying to correct your totally incorrect statements about HD formats, period.
you're professional engineering job sure isn't teaching you much if you believe anything under 1080p is True/Full HD. You are a clasified tech noob IMO if you actually believe that. Time for you to go read up....here ya go Google
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=Full+hdSo I googled that out of curiosity. I found out he is correct and that you're the noob.
There is no such thing as 'True HD' except as a marketing buzzword. Look for the tech articles written by engineers, not the pop articles written by journalists.
Sent from my iPad 2 using Tapatalk
Both True HD and Full HD are marketing terms. They are not standards. One could just as easily come up with "Super HD" or "Turbo HD", tell everyone you mean 1080p, and there you go you have yet another meaningless phrase.
The standard was set by the FCC via the Advanced Television Standards Committee (ATSC). The standard specifies 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, and 1080p. 720p 1080i and 1080p are defined as being HD, while 480i / 480p are SD.
Due to bandwidth limitations, broadcasters generally use 720p or lower.
The standard is below. 720 and 1080 are both HD.
The real name for 1080p is SMPTE 274M
Standard Aspect
RatioLinesSamples/Line
SMPTE 274MHD16:910801920
SMPTE 296MHD16:97201280
ITU-R BT.601.3SD4:3483720
Video Acquisition Standards
Sent from my iPod Shuffle
He's not incorrect. True or Full HD refers only to 1080p. 720p is still HD, but it has not ever been identified as true/full HD.
Both True HD and Full HD are marketing terms. They are not standards. One could just as easily come up with "Super HD" or "Turbo HD", tell everyone you mean 1080p, and there you go you have yet another meaningless phrase.
The standard was set by the FCC via the Advanced Television Standards Committee (ATSC). The standard specifies 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, and 1080p. 720p 1080i and 1080p are defined as being HD, while 480i / 480p are SD.
Due to bandwidth limitations, broadcasters generally use 720p or lower.
The standard is below. 720 and 1080 are both HD.
The real name for 1080p is SMPTE 274M
Standard Aspect
RatioLinesSamples/Line
SMPTE 274MHD16:910801920
SMPTE 296MHD16:97201280
ITU-R BT.601.3SD4:3483720
Video Acquisition Standards
Sent from my iPod Shuffle
FHD is not a marketing term. That is where full HD comes from. The proper name of the 1080p resolution is FHD.
Are you an EE? I'm an ME student. Totally random just making conversation lol.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2
shady, it doesn't matter how many facts you quote, the naysayers will just continue to make up their own...![]()
You are all wrong. Real/Full HD is called 4K![]()