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HD Era Doesn't Start Till Sony Says So

GamesIndustry.biz is reporting on comments from Phil Harrison, who says that consumers looking for an HD experience should wait for the PS3. From the article: "The true definition of HD is the three elements of the HD value chain - the display, the content and the hardware to play back that content ... and PlayStation and Sony is the only organisation that has all three bits of the value chain together."

4 of 51 comments (clear)

  1. Oh, THAT HD. by Errandboy+of+Doom · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought this was a slam on the 360's reduced hard drive space.

    Could we maybe not reuse acronyms?

  2. I can do better... by tktk · · Score: 5, Funny
    I can go beyond HD. All I have to do is look away from any TVs or monitors.

    The resolution of reality is amazing. At least 2x better than HD.

    No good programs to watch or games to play though, just a bunch of tables and chairs.

  3. Sony's value chain by Urkki · · Score: 5, Funny

    "...and Sony is the only organisation that has all three bits of the value chain together."

    Yeah, and the three bits are:
    - protecting user from unlawful access to digital content
    - improving customers' stored digital media (eg MP3 files on PC hard disk)
    - enabling automatic installation of useful software by third parties

  4. Re:HD Chain by /ASCII · · Score: 4, Informative
    Why is there an article? Because Sony says so!

    There seem to be two claims in the article, though they are both kind of vauge.

    The first one is that 720p is not true HD. 720p is 1280*720 @ 60Hz, which is roughly 5.3 higher than SD as used in DVDs, i.e. 720*480 @ 60/2 Hz. 1080p is 1920*1080 @ 60 Hz, another 2.2 times more than 720p. So the step between 720p and 1080p is much smaller than the one from 480i to 720p. It should also be noted that 720p and 1080i contain roughly the same amount of information. It is very unclear to what degree Sony will support 1080p. While the PS3 itself will support it, that does not mean all games will. Sony has made no such statements. Sonys consumer level projectors that are sold today use 720p resolution internally. Blu-ray will support both 720p and 1080p. While many movies will probably be released in 1080p, they are originally shot at 24 FPS, which means they will actually contain less information thatn a full 720p signal, i.e. less information than the 'not HD' Xbox 360. I don't know if there are any tv-series shot in higher resolution than 720p, but I'm sure there aren't many. So there will be very little content for Sony to release that can outperform what the Xbox 360 does today.

    The second claim is even more vauge. You need three things for HD:

    1. A HD compatible TV-set
    2. Something that can generate an HD signal (like a HD reciever, PS3, a PC or a Xbox 360)
    3. Some HD material (Like a game for the Xbox 360, a HD cable signal or a HD-resolution video file)


    What Sony seems to be implying is that while there are lots and lots of different providers that can give you any one of the above, no single provider is currently providing all three. This is true. Sony is also saying that if you aren't using the same brand on all three parts, you aren't using HD. This is false.

    By extension, that would imply that once the PS3 arrives, you won't be doing real HD unless you are playing a Sony game and using a Sony TV-set. So you best forget about playing Resident Evil or buying that Panasonic plasma. Otherwise you won't be doing HD. Says Sony.
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