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In Reply to: RE: REVIEW: Denon DVD-2930ci DVD Players posted by author@escapeclause.net on December 23, 2010 at 16:40:46
We folks in Florida must be 180 out of the rest of the World. Excellent review, ----plus----, the more excellent reviews I read about the HDMI/Analogue audio out lockouts/Multichannels/Color Balance/Plasma/LCD/1080/720 world, the more I prefer my lowly VCR and 25 inch generic CRT type teli and basic "analog" cable with 50 channels.
My only -real complaint- is the +6 levels of the advertisements and the fact that A&E runs up to 18 ads at a time (no joke)
Follow Ups:
Sorry to be so cruel.. (guilt is rising as I have relatives in Fla. and I truely love the Florida Gulf Coast beaches..)
I could never go back to a tiny light-bulb type TV and VCR. It would be just like listening to music only through a 1960's transistor radio.
I think the rise of widescreen HD is equal to the change from black and white TV to color.
I do not bother with cable or dish.. who needs them when you can get BETTER picture quality for free over the air with hidef widescreen!!!
You really need a good 42" or bigger HD set..
I have a Sony Plasma 42" that I bought when a good 42" cosst over $4,000.
My next plasma will be a Panasonic top of the line Pro 60".. (I wish Panny made a separate high quality HD tuner for them...)
If ever I were to upgrade my TV, I think I'd go with the 65" 720p set that Philips made for awhile. The whole 1080p business doesn't do a thing for me, personally. I guess that's the definition of officially being dated?
Now it seems crazy to have paid $4K for a 42". But at the time it was cutting edge, and a good price.
Just saying, you don't want to be caught with yet another “obsoleted before it has collected any dust” HD format TV.
I don't like that high-def stuff. I went over to a friend's house and saw Reservoir Dogs in full 1080p, and it gave me a headache: I kept squinting and half-crossing my eyes, expecting Harvey Keitel to turn 3-D. I mentioned this to my friend and he said, "Oh, we didn't like it for the first dozen or so movies, but now we don't like the 720p format!" And I thought to myself: "Wait a minute, you didn't like the new format, so you kept watching it anyway until you reached the point where you didn't have any choice but to replace all of your movies? I've got two thousand movies!"
My friends here say that eventually I won't have any choice, but I have a hard time tracking with the logic of that statement: There will, surely, always (at least in the eyes of a 41 year-old like me) be cast-off 720p TV's and 720p DVD-players -- and I don't have any TV signal whatsoever. So how, exactly, am I going to get "forced" into throwing everything out and starting all over?
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