HDTV Wonder & DTV Player - Quality Upgrade

You may notice that in the DTV player, you get black bars in the window; this is because not all content broadcasted is actually HDTV content. Commercials, generally speaking, are not in HDTV resolutions, but they are in some sort of a DTV resolution (either EDTV or SDTV), so broadcasters have to add in black bars to maintain a native HDTV resolution. This is why you get black bars in the window sometimes. This rule applies to DTV programs that are also in EDTV or SDTV resolutions. If you own an actual HDTV set, you don't see these black bars because the HDTV manufacturer includes coding that manipulates the image into the native 16:9 HDTV resolution.

Technically, commercials are converted from an analog format to a digital format, but they look better in a DTV environment because analog viewing generally has noise/interference that makes the signal look worse. You can see the difference particularly when you get to instances of commercials using bright colors.

Keep in mind that we are capturing a HDTV screenshot at the native 1080i resolution (16:9 widescreen) with a roughly 65% to 71% signal strength, and analog TV streams via analog cable at the standard 640 x 480 (4:3 ratio) with a ATI All-in-Wonder 9600 Pro on another system. If you are watching TV full screen with the TV player at 1280 x 1024 on your computer monitor, the computer scales it upward, which is another reason why TV looks poor on a computer. If you watch DTV on your computer, you are most likely scaling down because at 1080i, the signal is being broadcasted at like, 1920 x 1080. This is the same effect that you get when you start with a picture at 800 x 600 and try to either enlarge it or make a thumbnail.

 


DTV coverted commercial

 


Analog format commercial



DTV converted commercial
Click to enlarge.



Analog format commercial
Click to enlarge.


Analog converted to digital programs also follow the same rule. People look better and more distinguishable, but you still will run into the bar issue with analog to DTV converted programs.

 


DTV converted program

 


Analog format program



DTV converted program
Click to enlarge.



Analog format program
Click to enlarge.


DTV Player – DTV Time-shifted (continued) HDTV Wonder & DTV Player – Quality Upgrade (continued)
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  • oupei - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    output goes to you video card, many of which have DVI. dunno of any that have component video though...
  • devonz - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    Why am I limited to watching my HDTV signals on my monitor instead of my nice big HDTV television? In other words, why no component output cable, or DVI? Just a thought :) -Devon
  • lebe0024 - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    "With HDTV slowing becoming the standard"

    Do you guys READ the stuff you write? It's the first sentence for crying out loud.
  • skunkbuster - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    it looks kind of basic/generic for something that costs $200...
  • Aquila76 - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    Great, $200 more to spend when I build my new PC in a couple months!
  • johnsonx - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    What's ATI's position on combining an HDTV Wonder with an existing All-in-Wonder 9600/9700/9800 card? Specifically, what level of 2-tuner and PiP support will be available? Will using both together be kludgy or seamless?

    Those who have AIW based HTPC's will be eager to know this.
  • Doormat - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    Sad this card doesnt support QAM, my cable co puts out local HD channels in the clear. Then there is the new CableCard standard.

    Of course, if it had a firewire port and appropriate software, I could hook it up to my HD set and record software!

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