This is an experiment anybody can try.
Visit the APPLE Quicktime Web page here:
You'll see a variety of H.264 samples.
- 1080p (1920 x 1080) samples;
- 720p (1280 x 720) samples;
- 480p (848 x 480) samples.
Play them on the screen you have available.
My brother has a Mac and we downloaded a variety of clips.
What really surprised us was the quality of the 480p clips.
They looked surprisingly good even on my brother's 32-inch flat panel.
There's no reason good 480p standard definition video can't look just fine on a flat panel display.
The 720p clips -- as expected -- looked awesome.
The 1080p clips -- not surprisingly -- probably would look very, very good on a higher-resolution display, but since my brother's display features a native resolution of only 1366 x 768 (not high enough to actually see all of the pixels of 1080p material), we couldn't see any difference between the 1080p and the 720p.
But do have a look at those 480p clips.
They're not bad at all.
Jerry Jones
Visit the APPLE Quicktime Web page here:
You'll see a variety of H.264 samples.
- 1080p (1920 x 1080) samples;
- 720p (1280 x 720) samples;
- 480p (848 x 480) samples.
Play them on the screen you have available.
My brother has a Mac and we downloaded a variety of clips.
What really surprised us was the quality of the 480p clips.
They looked surprisingly good even on my brother's 32-inch flat panel.
There's no reason good 480p standard definition video can't look just fine on a flat panel display.
The 720p clips -- as expected -- looked awesome.
The 1080p clips -- not surprisingly -- probably would look very, very good on a higher-resolution display, but since my brother's display features a native resolution of only 1366 x 768 (not high enough to actually see all of the pixels of 1080p material), we couldn't see any difference between the 1080p and the 720p.
But do have a look at those 480p clips.
They're not bad at all.
Jerry Jones
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