millerbrad said:
So, the recurring theme with 1080p panels seems to be that they don't actually accept a 1080p source. That's a bummer for those of us who might want to play their PS3 in its supposed full glory.
I know there's the workaround to get 1080p into the 45" Aquos LCD (see Duffinator's post earlier in this thread). Does anyone know of any other televisions that are out there which can actually accept 1080p?
It may not actually matter in the end. Yesterday I was reading the spec sheets on the new 1080p-capable Mitsu DLPs. The HDMI inputs are listed as taking up to 1080i, and the lit says they scale that up to 1080p and I started pondering this question again.
As I believe we have discussed elsewhere in reference to BD/HD-DVD, it is mathematically possible to exactly reconstruct 1080p from 1080i, if the original source was 1080p. Although it seems counter-intuitive, and I no longer have the knowledge in the cobwebs of my grey matter, the math works. This may not be the case any more, but in earlier days of DVD most, if not all, progressive-scan players used the same interlaced MPEG decoders as non-progressive players. They just had another chip that de-interlaced the digital data stream.
Once you go analog, you lose the ability to do that, but in the digital domain, it is not just possible, but not really all that difficult.
Given that MPEG-2/4 content is inherently non-interlaced, it should be the case that if your 1080i link from source to monitor is DVI or HDMI, the monitor should be able to reconstruct a picture that is mathematically equivalent to the original 1080p.
All that said, some of the Mitsus also have VGA inputs that will take a 1920x1080p analog signal.