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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jan 2008 09:52:22 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "D.Duck" wrote in message om... Most people are used to the factory provided torch mode/excessive sharpness and just realize how really good a toned down picture can look, be it analog or digital TVs. In digital, the sharpness control does absolutely nothing to the program material or monitor. All it does is to introduce artificial "edge" artifacts to the display that are not in the original program source, giving some people the false illusion that the picture is "sharper". It reminds me of using a loudness control or over-emphasizing treble in an audio system. Increasing sharpness on a digital source program not necessary and can actually make the picture worse. What's the process of making the picture better? Basically adjusting the drives to the NTSC standards that the programming was originally recorded in. Black becomes black instead of grey (that used to look like black). Color and contrast is much more authentic. And that's without going into the advanced control setups. The value of the DVD is having the reference test patterns and an explanation of how to use them, along with the filters they provide to see the effects of your adjustments. Eisboch |
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