(I searched for an existing thread, but couldn't find one. Apologies and let me know if there is one - I'll repost over there.)
Anywho...
Thought you all might like a report on Toshiba's HD-DVD demonstration tour. I went to the Minnetonka, MN Ultimate Electronics last night (Wed, 22/Mar) out of morbid curiousity (haha). I would have rated my interest in purchasing a dedicated HD-DVD player at somewhere around 10% before last night. I'd say that seeing the thing in person and getting to ask some questions of the Toshiba rep roughly doubled that.
The first thing that went through my head was "Wow!". Since full-length movies aren't available yet (and keep getting pushed back a few weeks at a time) they had a loop of trailers that had been remastered at (according to the rep) about 20 Mbps (of the 30+ Mbps available) in MPEG-4. Some of the trailers of interest: Constantine, Serenity, Batman Begins, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. (Of no interest: Dukes of Hazard) So before opening my yap, I decided to take in a round or two of the loop.
Resolution is incredible. Since the first players are only doing 1080i, the Toshiba RP set (72MX195 ?) was de-interlacing to 1080p. The picture was better than any movie theater outside of Imax. There was one split-second clip in Charlie that I could see the subtlest bit of banding in the grey-blue of the sky (admittedly the toughest material for MPEG compression). Other than that, I couldn't catch any compression artifacts. (Since it was a quick-cut trailers, it was admittedly tough to study any clip for long.)
For comparison they had the same player (the $800 HD-XA1 - more on the differences between players in a minute) playing a copy of the Chicken Little DVD. For DVDs, the picture is up-converted to 1080i. I didn't ask what scaler they were using, but the combination of that circuit and the de-interlacing in the TV convincingly bested any up-converting DVD player and TV combination I have ever seen. Even so, there was no comparison between the up-converted DVD and the HD-DVD. True high-bandwidth HD is something to behold!
My first question was about 1080p - the rep threw out the old line that HDMI won't do 1080p yet. I called him on it, and he backed down, admitting that the current HDMI spec did indeed support 1080p and that he didn't know when Toshiba would be doing a 1080p player. I also asked if the HDMI was passing mulit-channel audio. "Yes," was the answer. Next I asked about the recently much-buzzed-about analog down-converting. Mr. Rep replied that the hardware doesn't limit it - the component outputs will do a full 1080i, just like the HDMI. However there is a software flag that the studios can set to throttle the component outs to 480p. (Caveat emptor! - I think we need to demand that HD-DVD reviewers test for and include information on this, especially if the studios decide not to label the packaging appropriately.)
(Side note on this: I realized this morning (and therefore didn't get to ask the rep about it) that if you are using an older set with no digital input, you could end up in a situation where a DVD copy of a movie could be up-converted to 1080i while the HD-DVD copy of the same movie would be down-converted to 480p. How lame is that ?!?!?)
I promised to elaborate on the differences between the first two players from Toshiba. According to the rep they are identical in specifications and performance. The only differences you get for your extra $300 are a beefier chassis (vibration damping, extruded aluminum), RS-232 control, a fancier backlit remote, and a gimmicky motorized door.
Now for my editorial...
If you have a digital-capable TV and haven't already purchased an up-converting DVD player, I would probably recommend you at least consider the lower-end model. For an extra $250-ish over the price of the DVD player you might have bought, you get an impressive up-converting DVD player plus the HD-DVD capability. This would make the pain of switching horses in a year (adding a PS3 or dedicated Blu-Ray player, or replacing with a dual-format combo player) a lot easier to bear.
If you have piles of money, a Crestron automated home theater, and the compelling neurosis to have every new toy on the market, you are an ideal candidate for the $800 box.
For most people, especially those who already have an up-converting DVD player and HD cable/satellite with premium movie channels in HD, it seems the wiser course at this time to at the least wait a few months until there's more software and a clearer picture of when the combo players will hit and how much they'll cost.
Since Sony is only one major studio short of having the overwhelming majority of movie catalogs at least promised for Blu-Ray (v. 60%-ish for HD-DVD right now) I am still leaning that direction myself. But I don't think there can be any blanket recommendation at this point to either accept or reject either format. As I detailed above, I believe the answer will be different for each enthusiast's situation.