What is HDTV?
HDTV is a new digital standard for television, one with a higher resolution picture and a wider aspect ratio (the ratio of width to height of the screen). Panasonic 34inch HDTV monitor I have used this page as a way to keep notes on what I’d learned while figuring out what system to buy. I did finally buy the Toshiba 34″ 16×9 HDTV-ready set, and the matching Set-Top Box. It had gotten uniformly good reviews and in fact I’m happy with it. Now that I have bought one, the emphasis on this page will shift more to using an HDTV and the content available, and less on the different models available.
High Definition Television (HDTV) is a type of Digital Television (DTV) that combines extremely high resolution with Dolby Surround Sound capabilities. HDTV provides a crisp, detailed image. HDTV screens are wider than they are tall, providing a panoramic view, similar to a movie screen. This allows you to see movies as they were filmed without reformatting. There are also HDTV-capable sets that look like regular televisions, but provide HDTV formatting in a letterbox presentation (with black bars on the top and bottom of the TV image).
High-definition television (HDTV) is a high-resolution digital TV format. A high-definition TV signal has up to two times the color resolution and a picture that is up to six times sharper than that provided by a traditional regular TV set. HDTV also provides enhanced audio, such as Dolby Digital.
HDTV stands for high-definition television. HDTV is a class of digital television that provides a very high-resolution picture with Dolby digital surround sound. The higher resolution picture, displaying up to ten times more image detail than standard TV, is the primary selling point for HDTV. HD signals also display in 16:9 aspect ratio as opposed to the standard 4:3 (a loss of up to 55% of the frame on movies filmed for the big screen), this allows viewers to see the whole screen.