My kids bought me a digital TV for Father's Day, a 720p unit. Last week they followed up with a Blu-Ray player. Some observations.
Previous to HDTV when we were still watching analog we would experience occasional "freezes" of the picture/sound, which would last from a fraction of a second up to about two seconds. These were rare. Obviously the cable company is feeding us decoded digital signal. (We still are using the analog sets in some rooms of the house.) Just as obviously, these freezes were attributable to the cable company's equipment or to cable networks.
Since going digital the frequency of these freezes has increased. We can hardly watch a one hour show without experiencing one or two of them. One of them lasted about 10 seconds by my estimate.
As for the Blu-Ray player, it also plays DVDs. When playing DVDs the freezes are much more frequent, at least one every five minutes. Very annoying. The problem is not on the DVDs since I can watch these same disks on my computer with no problem.
My daughter's bf, who makes good money as a computer tech, says the problem is "cheap equipment." I.e., the TV/Blu-Ray can't keep up with the signal. Since these were gifts I really don't know what they cost but I'm fairly certain that the TV was under $500 U.S. and the Blu-Ray about $100.
We have watched one rented Blu-Ray disk and the problem did not seem as severe.
Another problem is aspect ratios, a real pain. The TV lets me select from 4 aspect ratios:
- Wide
- Zoom
- Cinema
- Normal
The Blu-ray also offers four aspect ratios:
- 4:3
- 4:3 letterbox
- 16:9
- 16:9 full
Juggling aspect ratios is a pain. It seems to me that the state of the art is such that the selection of the proper aspect ratio should be automatic. In ten - twenty years it probably will be.