Παντως κατι δεν παει καλα με το Samsung σιγουρα...
Σε μια συγκριση του που εγινε με το Elite BDP-HD1 (μοντελο προπαραγωγης), το βρηκαν πολυ χειροτερο....
"Per testing at Pioneer on Friday afternoon, identical Blu-ray demo material was tested on both the Samsung BD-P1000 and Pioneer's yet-to-be-released Elite BDP-HD1 (a near production model), both connected to identical, side-by-side (and identically calibrated) Pioneer Pro-FHD1 Elite plasmas. Two different store-purchased Samsung players were checked. Connections were made at 1080p via HDMI on both the Samsung and Pioneer players. The Samsung suffered reduced color, contrast and detail reproduction compared to the Pioneer. The monitors were swapped to ensure the displays were not a factor - the problem migrated to the new monitor. We then switched the Samsung to 1080i component. The picture quality improved greatly - color, contrast and detail were MUCH closer to the Pioneer at 1080p via HDMI. Chris Walker and Andy Parsons of Pioneer both saw the identical effect. I will stress that at no time was the Samsung picture quality bad... it just wasn't as good as it should have been, and not as good as the Pioneer, until we switched to the component outputs.
Now, I'm not a Samsung engineer, so I can't tell you exactly how they're processing the video signals delivered via HDMI and component. All I can tell you is that on the two Samsung players we tested, the HDMI 1080i video suffered from some sort of loss of high-frequency signal loss, such that color, contrast and image detail were reduced. The effect would probably be difficult to notice without side by side comparision. In fact, on my own all I was able to tell was that something just didn't quite look right, which was very frustrating. But tested side by side with another player, the difference was quite obvious. It surprised both myself and Chris.
I now firmly believe that the component output on the Samsung is the most accurate source to use when watching Blu-ray material, and I stand by that.
I'm not responsible for or accountable for the experiences of others, but I would suggest that there's been an awful rush to judgement by a lot of people based on one player and a handful of discs for each format. I would suggest that when others have had the chance to compare the Samsung Blu-ray Disc player and the Toshiba HD-DVD player to other models/brands of player on each respective format, people will be able to comment with more authority. In any case, I'm quite confident with what I've seen with my own two eyes, in careful testing.
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Bill Hunt, Editor
The Digital Bits
http://www.thedigitalbits.com
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