
- Off Topic , El plasma de Samsung , para jugar
Off Topic , El plasma de Samsung , para jugar
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Re: Off Topic , El plasma de Samsung , para jugar
Samsung PS-50P96FD Review
The competition hits back against Pioneer's KURO plasmas

For
- Low price
- Great HD pictures
- Lovely pictures
- Impressive specification
Against
- Motion could be handled better
- Rather feeble audio
Verdict
Samsung shows that a feature-packed, high-performance full HD plasma doesn't have to cost an arm and a leg
getImagesInGallery("cntNewsMediaBoxImgWrapper");Wh atever benefits for movie viewing plasma technology may have over LCD - and there are arguably many - there's one area where the latter technology traditionally leads and that's on resolution.
For, while LCD TVs with HD-lovin' pixel counts of 1920 x 1080 are now commonplace, the difficulties of cramming the same number of plasma chambers into a sensibly-sized screen has left many manufacturers scratching their collective heads.
But, thankfully, this issue seems to have been resolved. Panasonic's first ever full HD 42in plasma TV, the 42PZ700, has just arrived. And here we have Samsung's first full HD gas flatscreen, the PS-50P96HD.
Features
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We get off to a good start with the discovery among the panel's connections of a much-appreciated trio of HDMIs. Then there's a component video input, the usual Scarts, digital tuner support and an optical audio output for sending Freeview audio to an external amplifier.
Elsewhere, the screen's full HD resolution is aided by a 'Just Scan' mode that removes all overscanning to permit direct 1:1 pixel mapping of 1,080-line HD sources to the screen's own pixel array. The 50P96HD supports 1080p inputs too - including the 24fps mode used to encode most movies to HD DVD and Blu-ray discs.
Coming from the Samsung stable, the screen has features a-plenty on offer and we've only just scratched the surface of them. For instance, thanks in part to Samsung's new Ultra FilterBright technology, which soaks up as much as 90 per cent of onscreen reflections, the panel claims a stunningly high 15,000:1 contrast ratio, which falls only 1000:1 short of the figure quoted by Pioneer's innovative new KURO plasma sets.
There's also a Movie Plus mode that interpolates extra image frames to make motion look smoother, and Samsung's Digital Natural Image engine, designed to boost colours, black levels, detailing and motion.
The HDMI sockets turn out, meanwhile, to be version 1.3 affairs, which means they enable compatibility with exclusive HDMI v1.3 features such as the expanded 'Deep Colour' tonal palette and auto lip-sync correction.
Deep Colour is dependent on a particular source disc actually carrying the format. But another of the 50P96HD's colour talents, dubbed Natural True Colour, works with any material. The term describes the screen's use of 18-bit processing to produce a claimed 18 quadrillion colour shades.
Yet more tricks include black level and white balance adjustments, a dynamic contrast mode, gamma adjustments, edge enhancements, almost total colour control and digital noise reduction.
At first glance, all seems well in terms of ease of use. The onscreen menus are beautifully presented and the remote control is stylish and decently laid out. But we soon became aggravated by how sluggishly the menus react to button presses on the remote.
Picture-wise, the 50P96HD's presentation of 1080p sources is little short of mesmerising. Take, for instance, the amount of fine detail in the picture. The panel reproduces every last pixel of data from good high- definition sources with uncanny accuracy and without a trace of noise, resulting in arguably the crispest, most textured HD picture we've ever seen on a 50in plasma TV. It's that good.
Also way better than anticipated are the plasma's black levels. Depths of grey-free darkness are achieved that shame all LCD TVs we can think of, enabling you to become completely involved in the gloomiest movies, and even coming close to matching the efforts of Panasonic's far more expensive plasma screens.
Pioneer's KURO sets have markedly richer black levels still, but then the 50in model costs £100s more than this Samsung and doesn't offer full HD resolution.
Según esto parece que es compatible 100% con el tema de los 24 fps, pero más abajo en las especificaciones pone esto:
Supported Format (Interlaced)
480i (SDTV)
Supported Format (Progressive) 1080p 480p (EDTV)
Remote Control Yes
Remote Control Type Standard Infrared
1080p Output Yes
1080p/24 Output No
720p/1080i Output Yes
Component 1
Flatscreen Yes
HD-Compatible Yes
HDMI Ports 3
Native Resolution (horizontal pixels) 1920
Native Resolution (vertical pixels) 1080
¿ En que quedamos ? o yo lo entiendo mal, o es una mierda de análisis.
Última edición por Xavidvd; 11/02/2008 a las 10:31
Hilo TV para Videojuegos... AQUI
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