Talk:Enhanced-definition television

Latest comment: 3 years ago by Nojoeco in topic edtv was broadcast. Absolutely confirmed

Rewrote the article

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Now I need someone to check grammar and spelling. DCEvoCE (talk) 00:02, 22 March 2008 (UTC)Reply


Is 480p24 or 480p30 considered EDTV?

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"EDTV signals are often broadcast in a 16:9 aspect ratio, and are generally considered equivalent in picture quality to the DVD format."

O rly? A motion picture or filmed television series consists of 24 or 25 frames per second. DVD of a motion picture or a filmed television series is in effect 720x480p24 (NTSC or PAL-M at 2:3 cadence), 720x480p25 (NTSC or PAL-M at 2:2:3:2:3 cadence used in NTSC releases of some European films and in some TV airings of North American films that are compressed to allow for more advertisements), or 720x576p25 (PAL). The 480p article and the {{TV resolution}} template seem to imply that a 480p signal has to have 60 distinct frames per second to be considered EDTV, meaning that a motion picture in EDTV must be at least 720p. --Damian Yerrick () 19:30, 24 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Frame rate is irrelevant to whether or not something is EDTV. "Definition" refers to sharpness, not smoothness of motion. Only pixel count, compression, and the presence or absence of interlace come into account. It's debatable whether or not a signal from a DVD could be considered EDTV. IMHO: If it it pure progressive 24p, perhaps, but not if it has been de-interlaced. Algr 15:46, 27 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
What is the practical difference between a pure progressive signal and a properly deinterlaced signal? --Damian Yerrick () 23:51, 1 May 2006 (UTC)Reply
1) If you are viewing an interlaced signal from a DVD, the best connectors you could be using is analog component. That signal would then have to be re-digitized before it could be de-interlaced. This processing would cause signal loss compared to routing a progressive signal directly to a CRT. (This might not effect non-CRT displays, which have to digitize any analog signal no matter what.)
2) I'd question if a de-interlacer could ever be perfect, given the realities of DVD mastering. Often content that you'd think ought to be progressive, such as movies, end up being encoded in interlaced form for obscure production reasons. For example, in the DVD of the movie "Adaptation", the movie is progressive, but the bonus clips of ads for the movie are interlaced. I've no idea why. The ads look much worse then the movie on my computer's LCD screen, but on a regular TV, there is no difference since it is all interlaced.
3) When video is viewed on interlaced screens, the image must be blurred slightly (anti-aliasing) to prevent fine details from making one field brighter then the other and thus causing flicker. When you put the fields back together, you can't get that detail back. Anti-aliasing on DVDs happens during the mastering phase - players expect this to already be done. So even progressive DVDs aren't as sharp as a theoretical 480p DTV broadcast could be. Algr 05:18, 2 May 2006 (UTC)Reply
1) I was referring to the fact that DVD signals are stored interlaced on the disc, even if they are deinterlaced to 480p24 inside the player.
2) Yes, a perfect deinterlacer is possible as long as it can detect the cadence (using field differencing) and field dominance. If your DVD player has a poor deinterlacer, it's your DVD player's fault.
3) My Apex AD-1200 has picture modes HI-RES and NONFLICK. This "NONFLICK" mode must be there to compensate for DVDs that are not blurred in mastering. --Damian Yerrick () 16:29, 2 May 2006 (UTC)Reply
1) Films on DVD are supposed to be stored in 24p. (Any player can convert it to 60i for output.) However often the encoding is not done that way, for example if they start with a videotape transfer intended for laserdisc, or if a promo was edited on video gear that doesn't support 24p. Only then would the de-interlacer in your progressive scan player have to start guessing what field goes where.
2) This is circular reasoning. A perfect airplane is possible as long as it doesn't crash. There are also very difficult situations like a program shot on PAL and mixing film and video footage together, then converted to NTSC.
3) I've only seen one DVD that I suspected was not blurred for interlace - It was an anime, and looked rather harsh on my TV. The nonflick mode you describe would probably have helped, but next to no one is going to understand what that means and when to turn it on. Algr 17:03, 2 May 2006 (UTC)Reply
I need to edit that "Television resolution" chart, because it is wrong to include 720p in EDTV, and there is no such thing as 720i. But I can't figure out how to access it. What am I missing here? Algr 15:46, 27 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
To edit any (unprotected) template used in any page: Go to the article, click "edit this page", scroll down to "Templates used on this page", click one, and click "edit this page" again. --Damian Yerrick () 23:51, 1 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

Is there a SMTPE or ITU standard for 480p television?

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It would be helpful if these pages told the names of the standards.

-- user:GregGarner

I don't think they have names other then 480p, 576i ect. Unless you mean this: ATSC

EDTV TV Channels

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Anyone have a list of channels that broadcast in EDTV? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 84.255.168.44 (talk) 06:30, 10 January 2007 (UTC).Reply

ED Question

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There is one question that this page doesn't seem to answer. Can the normal crts, the ones that millions of people have owned for the past 15 years, display ED? Or is it only possible on the newer HD sets? JayKeaton 10:25, 6 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

The biggest requirement is the ability to scan at 31.5 kHz. Any "computer" CRT dating back to VGA (1987) can do this. (You may need an adapter to convert YPP components to RGB+sync components.) But "standard resolution" CRTs such as those used in SDTV sets and JAMMA arcade monitors can display only SDTV. --Damian Yerrick (talk | stalk) 11:34, 6 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

I m french so excuse me if my english is far from perfect. I thought till today that only newer sets could display ED. Thought it seems to be wrong. The Sega Saturn (1994) was able to output ED via a special video cable (currently a scart cable) on japaneese TV. I know some old TV also capable of ED via RGB Scart (Sony KVS2911B).It may be the case for every high cost TV system of that period.

HDTV or not?

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"EDTV generally refers to video with picture quality beyond what is broadcastable in NTSC or PAL, but not sharp enough to be considered High-definition television (HDTV)."

However, near the end of the article, there's also this:

"In the United States, the ATSC official DTV formats include SDTV, and HDTV. EDTV is considered part of the HDTV standard."

To my understanding, a 480 (or 576) line resolution is not "High-definition" by any widespread standard, that term only being used to denote the 720p and higher resolutions. Unless I missed something here. At any rate, this contradiction should be noted. RyokoYaksa 23:53, 12 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

50% more perceived vertical resolution than interlaced

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The statement "50% more perceived vertical resolution than interlaced" is only true in the context of a moving subject, but its entirely false in the case of a stationary subject. Anyone want to come up with a better wording? --Ray andrew 17:48, 24 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Merge from Extended-definition television

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Support - I support merging Extended-definition television into Enhanced-definition television. A simple move of content from Extended-definition television, while keeping non-duplicate data would be fine. — IncidentFlux [ TalkBack | Contributions ] 10:36, 12 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Weak Support - since both articles are rather short. They do seem to discuss different things, however. Enhanced is basically about the current DTV standards in 480p mode, while Extended is about what we DIDN'T do with NTSC to improve it's quality. If we get a good deal of info about rejected attempts to improve NTSC in the '90s, then it might be worth it to have separate articles Algr (talk) 16:39, 12 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Mention of the 854*480

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I don't know much about the resolution standards, but the graph in the article clearly seems to state that 854*480 is what EDTV is. Yet this format isn't mentioned even once in the article. Shouldn't it be? (It's in the green part here:)

--LeGUIGUI (talk) 15:45, 18 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

That resolution has been a long standing headache for the article. Some plasma displays used to be made at 854 x 480 pixels, but nothing was ever natively shot or broadcast at that pixel count. Actual broadcasts use 704 or 720 pixels horizontal. But this uses non-square pixels, so if you draw a rectangle with 720x480 pixels, it comes out with a non-standard 2:3 aspect ratio. Since people drawing the chart need 854 pixels to make the shape of the screen 16:9, that is what we keep seeing. Algr (talk) 21:29, 18 April 2008 (UTC)Reply
So basicaly, EDTV have a 720*480 resolution, but the use use of non-square pixel give it the size of a square pixel screen of 854*480, right? And if an ED video (720*480) is diplayed by an HDTV with square pixel and 16/9 ratio (for example, 1280*720) it will be interpreted as a 854*480 video and then upsacaled to the size of the screen. Did I get it right?--LeGUIGUI (talk) 00:47, 19 April 2008 (UTC)Reply
Close. An HD set would resample the 720 horizontal pixels directly into whatever it's native horizontal resolution was. (1280 in your example) There would be no need to turn 720 into 854 first. Another example of non-square pixels is the anamorphic lenses that can be placed on any camera (film or video) to change it's aspect ratio. It doesn't change the number of pixels or film grains you have, it just changes there shape, and thus the shape of the screen. Algr (talk) 18:58, 20 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

Recognition as high definition

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The end of the introduction says "in Australia the 576p digital TV system is officially recognized as high definition.[1]"

One broadcaster may choose to claim 576p is "HD" as mentioned in the reference, but that's hardly official. 124.176.20.49 (talk) 23:54, 20 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Is it obsolete or compatible with HDTV?

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Can I use an EDTV that is not specified as an HDTV to watch cable HDTV? Maybe it would not look quite as good, but would it basically work? BTW the specific EDTV in question is a Samsung SP-P4231 NS42D4, but that of course is not as important to the article's content as the practical general question. Thanks.CountMacula (talk) 06:14, 20 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

edtv was broadcast. Absolutely confirmed

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Many shows were in fact broadcast in edtv. I don't know why it's a point of confusion. Fox40 in Sacramento, not super far from Grass Valley Group, did broadcast some episodes of Star Trek the Next Generation in edtv, even including a scroller before the broadcast that "this program is in edtv". I'm certain there were other's but I was too busy producing the hardware to watch many shows back then.

Certain tv's of the era were capable of receiving these broadcasts. In fact right now I have a plasma edtv with full receiving capability. And no it wasn't ever properly defined on horizontal resolution, some sources are different than others. Probably due to being an even multiple of digital video data, or being a relative to analog. Hence there's multiple explanations of the horizontal resolutions. And I'm 99% sure the stations just used whatever the manufacturers provided.

DVD's are their own animal. Widescreen DVD's can be stretched to fill from regular sdtv, in anamorphic lens(720x480), shrunken letterbox(like vhs), or be genuine 852ish by 480, or any format that worked. I've seen all of these being used. In point of fact, auto-stretch is super common, just check any dvd's actual frame format. Don't be surprised to see anything from 480x480 to 900x512, it's literally just a disc with digital data. The player is responsible for making that into a video signal.

Grass Valley was a place I worked at and was physically there during the first HD tv recordings and transmission(internally) of the Olympics in the 90's. And yes we had tons of edtv support gear being built at the time for local stations. Therefore edtv was active, being transmitted, and more hardware was actively being ordered. As to the number of able receivers, well who knows?

I've never run into a e-vhs deck, but the d-vhs decks were designed to handle it. There were also widescreen modes in Hi-8mm, and Betacam that were specifically for edtv distribution. Yes there was a time when double horizontal resolution was a selling point. Of course it wasn't really double, that's just how they referred to it.

In later years I discovered that due to "stabilization tricks" they actually were often greater resolution than was thought of. It's just they output whatever they were told to in the circuitry. Actual sensors were often just square 1024x1024 and then cropped electronically to make whatever format was required. The extra space was to allow the primitive digital stabilization to have enough "image" room to move.

And yes this information can be included with any edit's required. I was just hoping to expand the knowledge on this subject. Nojoeco (talk) 23:09, 9 July 2021 (UTC)Reply