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DirecTV User Manual H20 User Manual

Page 83

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Resolution & Interlacing

Two elements that determine the quality of a TV picture are:

Resolution

If you’ve ever looked very closely at your TV, you have noticed the picture is actually made up of many

lines scanning across the screen. Th

e set of lines that make up a complete image are called a “frame.” For

TV equipment and broadcasts, resolution is defi ned by the number of horizontal lines displayed to make

up each frame of a video image. Th

e more lines of resolution used to compose each frame, the more

detailed and sharp the picture. Standard TV resolution uses 480 horizontal lines to make up each video

frame; HDTV uses either 720 or 1080 lines to compose each frame.

Interlaced & Progressive

Th

e term “interlacing” refers to whether each of those frames contains all of the lines of image, or every

other line. Interlaced signals take every other line from 2 frames, each lasting 1/60th of a second, and

combine them into one frame lasting 1/30th of a second. In this way, interlacing tricks the eye into

thinking it’s seeing twice the resolution that’s actually being displayed. In non-interlaced video, referred

to as “progressive scan” video, frames are displayed every 1/60th of a second containing all of the lines of

video information.

Th

e specifi cations for video resolution are usually stated by giving the number of horizontal lines (480,

720 or 1080, as described above) followed by either the letter “i” (for interlaced) or “p” (for progressive

scan). Most standard TV broadcasts are 480i; some DVDs and non- HDTV digital broadcasts use 480p.

Specifi cation for HDTV broadcasts and equipment requires either 1080i or 720p.