All of the big names in Electronics make 1080p camcorders.Sony,Sanyo,JVC and Canon have them.
you need a HDMI cable and 1080P media like a Blue ray disc and a HDTV with 10080P capabilities before you will receive full 1080P. For example most HD TV programing is only 720P and will not be in full 1080P on a 1080P HDTV and a TV show in 480i standard will be in 480i on a 1080P HDTV
HD 1080p televisions are produced by many different companies that range from low end to high end. Toshiba, LG, Samsung and Sony all offer reliable HD 1080p television sets. Coby and Sceptre offer lower to mid tier products.
Mini dv concerters also known as camcorders are manufactured by many comagnies such as samsung, canon, and nikon. For a full listing visit http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/electronics-computers/audio-video/camcorders/camcorder-buying-advice/camcorder-brands/camcorder-brands.htm.
This TV will support resolutions of up to 1080p.
yes 1080p
1080p is the full HD resolution. Blu-Ray discs can work on 730p TVs, but the image will not be in the full quality and will most likely appear distorted
The cheapest full HD (1080p) projector today is the Vivitek H1080FD. It is available online for as little as $800.00. Be careful when comparing projectors. You need to check the native resolution of the display (which must be at least 1080p), not the ability to handle 1080p signals. All the cheaper projectors with '1080p compatibility' downsample the resolution to as little as 480i to display, which is not HD.
There are plenty capture cards that can accept 1080p and even transcode in real near-time.
HD ready is all setup for HD stuff and Full HD is 1080p. also known as full HD An HD ready set does not have it's own tuner. The best HD tv sets do have their own built in tuners and include the numbers 1080p.
Broadcast television currently does not use 1080p. The HD formats in use at present are 720p and 1080i. The "i" stands for interlaced and it means that on a single pass of the screen half of the image is built up. The second pass sees the remainder of the image added to the first half. A full image is delivered 25 or 30 times each second. A 1080p signal delivers a full image on every pass, 50 or 60 times each second. 1080p therefore needs double the amount of data compared to 1080i. Broadcast infrastructure and the extra bandwidth requirements prevent 1080p being broadcast. 1080p is limited at present to Bluray and other local HD sources such as computers and game consoles. Don't expect to see 1080p from your television service provider any time soon. The 1080p identification on the television says that it will display 1080p but of course can only do this with a 1080p incoming signal.
Sanyo CG20 Full HD, it's crazy
Yes there is - its full name is InfraredSHARPcam High Definition ISC-7500