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jb60606

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 27, 2008
871
0
Chicago
Is it just me or is there barely a difference between HD and SD on ATV?

I'm not saying HD looks bad on the ATV. If anything, SD looks quite exceptional.

I'm viewing it on a 46" Sony LCD @ 720P over HDMI.
 

pdutta2000

macrumors regular
Jun 4, 2008
157
0
I was actually thinking the exact same thing. I plan on doing a comparison this weekend. I want to see a DVD rip (using Handbrake) vs HD Conversion (MKV to MOV using Visual Hub) vs actual DVD. I'm going to use The Matrix and Casino Royale as my 2 test cases. I'm using my :apple:tv on a 61" LED Samsung DLP and the SD movies look awesome. WAY better than the DVD.
 

Michael CM1

macrumors 603
Feb 4, 2008
5,681
276
It may be because it's compressed and 720p. I can easily tell the difference between any of that and a Blu-ray Disc, video and sound. But I have played a lot of SD stuff, even stuff that I used a semi-low bitrate on to save space, and it looked pretty good.
 

CST

macrumors member
Jan 14, 2008
55
0
Yeah, there shouldn't even be a comparison. Even really compressed HD stuff will only look bad (blocky) during fast motion stuff.
 

kolax

macrumors G3
Mar 20, 2007
9,181
115
HD looks spectacular compared to SD on my Apple TV. If only I had more content that was HD.
 

netdog

macrumors 603
Feb 6, 2006
5,760
38
London
Watching on a Sony 42" 1080p, I really see little reason to rent HD movies having compared the two. I rented The Darjeeling Limited in HD and am not convinced that I would have noticed the degradation of SD if I had watched it in that. When studying the picture, the difference is clear, but when involved in the story, functionally I find no difference aside from price.
 

AliensAreFuzzy

macrumors 68000
May 30, 2004
1,561
0
Madison, WI
My handbrake encoded movies look excellent on the ATV and those are only SD. In fact, The Italian Job ripped looks just as good as the Blu-Ray version. The only noticable difference is that you see much more of the film grain in the Blu-Ray version
 

jb60606

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 27, 2008
871
0
Chicago
again, this post was more about SD completely exceeding my expectations.

I expect sub par HD on ATV, but the SD was a very pleasant surprise. I'd need an extra large TV to warrant the extra buck and 6GB download for HD.
 

BoulderBum

macrumors 6502a
Feb 3, 2008
513
0
I actually stopped renting Apple TV "HD" a long time ago for the same reasons. The videos are too compressed to have a true, high-quality HD picture.

Not that I'm disappointed, though! The Apple TV is the coolest thing since sliced bread!
 

dynaflash

macrumors 68020
Mar 27, 2003
2,119
8
Its all about the source and encode. For example, you can do an HD (720P) encode of an OTA HD source via eyetv hybrid with HandBrake with some nice advanced settings that are absolutely awesome to be honest. The result basically looks as good as the original HD over the air broadcast for the most part, while still maintaining the original AC3 DD.

Picture resolution is only part of the HD equation.
 

NT1440

macrumors G5
May 18, 2008
14,622
20,814

megfilmworks

macrumors 68020
Jul 1, 2007
2,046
16
Sherman Oaks
I watch one ATV I have on a 9 foot wide projection screen (1080p) and you can easily tell the difference between Apple HD and SD (as well as the difference between 1080i and 1080p non compressed sources from disc and computer)
It is not nearly as obvious on my bedroom 1080p 42 inch flat screen.

Many films have less than adequate transfers and the difference between any SD or HD transfer of these is hard to notice.
Modern animation is probably the best of the best for full non compressed 1080p from Bluray.
But they look great in SD as well (or Apple compressed HD).
 

nosaj070

macrumors newbie
Jul 25, 2007
6
0
I can tell the difference between HD and SD on it when watching on my 1080p LCD, but typically the reason why I spend the extra money on a rental is for the 5.1 sound as the picture difference is not that obvious to me.

One thing worth trying, as soon as Take 2 came out I set the Apple TV to 1080p thinking that would be best, but in my case I was wrong. *long winded answer* Due to the annoying issues with HDMI and the appletv (flashing screens, delayed screens, etc) I switched to component and limited myself to 720p and I have found that everything looks substantially better (especially SD, but HD looks better too) because my TV does a much better job scaling than the appletv does.

I'm just posting my realizations, hopefully this could help some of you out as well.
 

CST

macrumors member
Jan 14, 2008
55
0

Donz0r

macrumors 6502a
Jun 29, 2006
903
23
That was a good comparison. The only two things you'll never get from those is motion, and sound. The bluray would jump way ahead in both. Screen shots can only tell you how it looks at that time. Obviously helpful in showing which couldn't handle a ton of motion (Cable).

Yeah, Cable HD rentals are horrible with fast motion, this is actually one of the main reasons I purchased ATV, I watched Transformers HD for free on demand Cinemax, absolutely horrible blockiness during fast scenes (the best parts!). Unwatchable by my standards. We'll see how the ATV handles HD content, i just got mine yesterday and I'm gonna watch 10,000 BC tomorrow :D
 

digmo

macrumors member
Jan 10, 2008
84
0
I rented my first HD film and really was disappointed. I couldn't see much difference, the only thing was it was actually full screen with no black bars at the top and bottom.

Nothing to write home about though


David
http://www.digmo.co.uk
 

megfilmworks

macrumors 68020
Jul 1, 2007
2,046
16
Sherman Oaks
I rented my first HD film and really was disappointed. I couldn't see much difference, the only thing was it was actually full screen with no black bars at the top and bottom.
If you can't reproduce 5.1 audio and you don't have a great HD set then it won't matter what you rent or download. If you do have good equipment then the differences are obvious.
 

CST

macrumors member
Jan 14, 2008
55
0
If you can't reproduce 5.1 audio and you don't have a great HD set then it won't matter what you rent or download. If you do have good equipment then the differences are obvious.

I agree, there is no comparison. Although this is about Apple TV, they do a really good job with SD. HD, not so much.
 

Dobbs2

macrumors 6502
Jun 5, 2008
379
77
I rented my first HD film and really was disappointed. I couldn't see much difference, the only thing was it was actually full screen with no black bars at the top and bottom.

Nothing to write home about though


David
http://www.digmo.co.uk

Either you have never seen a 1080p film on a a 1080p TV or you have extremely poor eyesight. It should still have the widescreen format
or your TV is stretching the picture.
 

kolax

macrumors G3
Mar 20, 2007
9,181
115
Either you have never seen a 1080p film on a a 1080p TV or you have extremely poor eyesight. It should still have the widescreen format
or your TV is stretching the picture.

Not all movies are 16:9 format. Some are letter box. Apple's HD movies are 720p and are becoming notorious for not matching up to the Blu-Ray equivalent.
 

idyll

macrumors 6502a
Jun 5, 2007
500
15
Man I can barely tell there's a difference too... Not the case with my Xbox 360 HD vs SD - the difference in that case is really noticeable. What's the deal?
 
Aug 20, 2005
92
0
Yes I'm new to ATV, and my first rental was a HD movie - which looked fantastic, and played without a hitch. My second movie rental was SD and I was just as pleased with the quality.

Overall the movie rental thing is so much better than I expected, and I will rent my movies through ATV, rather than support my bastard cable company.
 

kolax

macrumors G3
Mar 20, 2007
9,181
115
My first rental was 'The Soleman Brothers' (FYI: rubbish) which was listed as SD. Took a while for it to be able to be played, and the quality was HD. Not sure if it was a listing error, but I've watched my fair share of SD and HD films, and this was definitely HD. Sharpness and detail was brilliant.

Strange one.
 
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