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LG Infinia LE8500 : Reviews - Εντυπώσεις - Σχόλια
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<blockquote data-quote="lmiltos" data-source="post: 1239533" data-attributes="member: 3482"><p>Οταν λες πιξελιασμα εννοεις θολουρα στην κινηση...γιατι εκει μιλαμε για motion resolution που με ελαχιστες εξαιρεσεις lcd-led τηλεορασεων οι plasma ειναι σαφως ανωτερες.</p><p></p><p>Δες και εδω <a href="http://www.crutchfield.com/S-u7S1S6en1me/learn/learningcenter/home/tv_flatpanel.html" target="_blank">http://www.crutchfield.com/S-u7S1S6en1me/learn/learningcenter/home/tv_flatpanel.html</a></p><p></p><p>Σου παραθετω αυτο που σε αφορα</p><p></p><p>All 1080p HDTVs have the same screen resolution — 1920 x 1080 pixels — but they don't always deliver equal picture clarity. Most sets provide flawless "static resolution" when displaying still images. But moving objects on screen are more difficult to display cleanly, and may look slightly blurry if the TV has limited "motion resolution." You won't see a motion resolution spec listed for most TVs, and while certain tests have measured large differences in motion resolution among TV types, the impact on real-world viewing is less dramatic.</p><p></p><p> * 120Hz anti-blur technology: A growing number of high-performance LCD TVs include anti-blur technology. Models with 120Hz refresh rate are fairly common, and a few now offer 240Hz refresh rate. Faster refresh rates make video motion look smoother on LCDs. Plasma TVs don't use (or need) this type of processing.</p><p></p><p></p><p> * LCD vs. plasma: LCD and plasma TVs use different methods to illuminate their screens, and that's the main reason for the differences in motion resolution between the two panel types. Plasma screens are self-illuminating — each image-producing pixel is like a microscopic fluorescent lamp that flashes on and off very rapidly, producing naturally smooth motion. Most LCDs use a backlight which shines constantly — the liquid crystal pixels open and close like shutters to either let the light through or block it. This shutter effect contributes to motion blur, but increasing the video frame rate to 120Hz or 240Hz virtually eliminates this smearing effect. LCD TVs with LED backlighting are more plasma-like in their motion handling because the LEDs flash on and off.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lmiltos, post: 1239533, member: 3482"] Οταν λες πιξελιασμα εννοεις θολουρα στην κινηση...γιατι εκει μιλαμε για motion resolution που με ελαχιστες εξαιρεσεις lcd-led τηλεορασεων οι plasma ειναι σαφως ανωτερες. Δες και εδω [url]http://www.crutchfield.com/S-u7S1S6en1me/learn/learningcenter/home/tv_flatpanel.html[/url] Σου παραθετω αυτο που σε αφορα All 1080p HDTVs have the same screen resolution — 1920 x 1080 pixels — but they don't always deliver equal picture clarity. Most sets provide flawless "static resolution" when displaying still images. But moving objects on screen are more difficult to display cleanly, and may look slightly blurry if the TV has limited "motion resolution." You won't see a motion resolution spec listed for most TVs, and while certain tests have measured large differences in motion resolution among TV types, the impact on real-world viewing is less dramatic. * 120Hz anti-blur technology: A growing number of high-performance LCD TVs include anti-blur technology. Models with 120Hz refresh rate are fairly common, and a few now offer 240Hz refresh rate. Faster refresh rates make video motion look smoother on LCDs. Plasma TVs don't use (or need) this type of processing. * LCD vs. plasma: LCD and plasma TVs use different methods to illuminate their screens, and that's the main reason for the differences in motion resolution between the two panel types. Plasma screens are self-illuminating — each image-producing pixel is like a microscopic fluorescent lamp that flashes on and off very rapidly, producing naturally smooth motion. Most LCDs use a backlight which shines constantly — the liquid crystal pixels open and close like shutters to either let the light through or block it. This shutter effect contributes to motion blur, but increasing the video frame rate to 120Hz or 240Hz virtually eliminates this smearing effect. LCD TVs with LED backlighting are more plasma-like in their motion handling because the LEDs flash on and off. [/QUOTE]
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