The model mentioned is a 720 line display, according to the specification. This means that all signals will be resized to 720 line to be displayed on the screen. This applies to any SD signal or any 1080 signal. If a 1080i signal is received, the display will automatically resize the signal to 720.
720 p is a decent resolution for HDTV but most people either watch TV in 1080i (common) or 1080p, (usually for sports or high action programming).
HD television is offered in several resolutions. The most common is 1920 pixels wide by 1080 pixels high, known as 1080i or 1080p. Less common but still HD is 720 line (1280 x 720). Both 1080i and 720p are considered to be full HD and are the two standards used in broadcast today. 1080p is the same resolution as 1080i but the image is refreshed at twice the rate of 1080i. It is not currently being used for broadcast and is seen only on local sources such as games consoles, Bluray players etc. There is another HD standard of 1035 lines. Used in Europe very briefly, it rarely if ever is used today and most modern television equipment won't support the format at all.
No that feature is for the PS3 and it is in 1080p resolution if your playing the movie on a 1080p hdtv, with an HDMI chord (I don't know if component cables play in 1080 or just 720)
You can't covert from one standard to the other. If the HDTV is a 1080 type, it will display that signal when present and display a 720 when it is present. A 720 HDTV will never display a 1080 resolution picture, it will show the picture in 720 resolution.
Yes as are all the major networks. This doesn't mean every program is recorded in the 1080 standard, some might be 720 or less. If the original program was not recorded in 1080, the program won't be seen in 1080.
1 × 720 = 720 2 × 360 = 720 3 × 240 = 720 4 × 180 = 720 5 × 144 = 720 6 × 120 = 720 8 × 90 = 720 9 × 80 = 720 10 × 72 = 720 12 × 60 = 720 15 × 48 = 720 16 × 45 = 720 18 × 40 = 720 20 × 36 = 720 24 × 30 = 720
High definition television uses one of three common formats - 720p, 1080i and 1080p. Any incoming signal will be delivered to a television in one of the three formats.720p indicates that there are 720 lines in the image. The "p" means "progressive" and a complete image is delivered 50 or 60 times each second.1080i shows that there are 1080 lines. The "i" stands for "interlaced" and the image is sent in two halves so a half image is sent 50 or 60 times each second but the full frame is sent only 25 or 30 times each second.1080p is also made up with 1080 lines but the "p" shows that a full image is delivered 50 or 60 times each second.Broadcasters use 720p or 1080i. These are both full HD signals. Although the 720 line image has a lower resolution, it is updated twice as fast. The data rate for 720p and 1080i is the same. Although 720p is less common than 1080i, it is used by broadcasters for some fast action content such as sports.1080p updates the image at twice the rate of 1080 and therefore uses double the bandwidth. Broadcasters do not send out 1080p and it is restricted to local sources such as Bluray, games consoles etc.
5% of 720= 5% * 720= 0.05 * 720= 36
720^2 = 518,400
1% of 720= 1% * 720= 0.01 * 720= 7.2
15% of 720= 15% * 720= 0.15 * 720= 108
5% of 720 = 5% * 720 = 0.05 * 720 = 36