Thursday, February 23, 2012

How come the high def tv's cant' seem to get rid of those bars on the top and bottom of the screens.?

Its annoying when you spend thousands of dollars on a big screen tv that measures the entire screen and you get it home and there's those bars on the screen sometimes quad smashed why isn't the industry at least making an honest attempt to address this problem.How come the high def tv's cant' seem to get rid of those bars on the top and bottom of the screens.?
Change your tv setting to full or full zoom. My sony lcd wont go full screen when i connect it with hdmi. So what i did is i have both hdmi and audio/video inputs from same dvd player. And when i want to go full screen, i switch to a/v input. You could do the same.
The industry is making an attempt, however movie producers create their films to be shown in theaters, not on TV sets. So the picture doesn't always fit the size TV screen that you have. Motion picture film is shot in a variety of aspect ratios depending on what the director is trying to convey. So you'll always have those bars on some programs because your screen doesn't expand and contract to fit the aspect ration of different films.How come the high def tv's cant' seem to get rid of those bars on the top and bottom of the screens.?
thats a screen ratio problem

most ratios are now 16:9 but maybe u have to change the setings from ur tv
I know with my parents TV you can change the ratio and stretch to fit just about any type of movie or show their TV isnt that expensive either so im sure yours does just check your settings im sure you will find itHow come the high def tv's cant' seem to get rid of those bars on the top and bottom of the screens.?
Most movies shot are done in 2.4:1 (around 21.5:9) format. Far wider than 16:9 and a format few TVs will use. HD TV Programs are 16:9, older content is 4:3.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspect_rati鈥?/a>
get a bluray player or a ps3

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