If I seemed un-calm it was not the case. I happen to be a Mac user/admin who works in a media production company, so I know some things about the available HW/SW, and history of such. I was only pointing out some history that seemed to be forgotten.
Mr. T, you first said "computer industry" so I took that to mean the entire spectrum of HW/SW/peripherals/etc... but then you scaled that back in your later post to be apparently only off-the-shelf laptops and desktops running some version of Windows. Obviously you are correct that there's not much A/V connectivity in the run-of-the-mill systems.
BMX, getting 720p out of a computer is trivial, we have 21" CRTs running at 1200p - normally it's not on a component cable, but that can be solved by a hardware adapter (we have a couple VGA -> component adapter cables down in our basement somewhere). The problem isn't the computer, it's the display. The consumer A/V world has such limited options of resolution and scanning rate (and at such *lower* resolutions and rates) that using a TV as a computer monitor pales in comparison to even an average-quality computer display.
The laptop I'm typing this on has a screen res of 1280x854, plus it has DVI out which *can* drive a projector or HDTV at one of *its* limited native resolutions. Again, DVI - available in computer world for many years, but only in consumer A/V within about the last 24 months.
There are computer monitors *and* consumer a/v sets that will accept both computer and HT gear inputs. Auto-switching, auto-sensing, auto-syncing. One of my best friends has a 42" LCD RP that will take DVI (computer or DVD player), component, S-, composite. There are relatively cheap converters that will let you use an Apple HD Cinema Display as an non-computer-driven HD display. BMX, why would you care that it's 16:10 instead of 16:9? Do the black bars on the top and bottom of your Star Wars DVDs TV bother you, too? If you look at the specs of your sources, there aren't many that are actually 16:9 (1.777:1), it's 1.85:1, 2.35:1, and so on.
But Mr. T, your original claim was that the computer industry is the one lagging, and it's quite the other way 'round. While all the tech's not necessarily available on the low-end PCs, even SVGA is far superior to most component signals.