720p looks awful. That's the fact.
I agree DQ, I think it look great, I have been enjoying it since it came out, nothing but a great picture and sound quality is awesome.No, that's not a fact. What something looks like is very subjective. I was just watching a TV show I snagged from Hulu in 720P and I was actually surprised at how good it looked. Sure, it's not going to look like 4K but then again I don't need 4K to enjoy a good show or movie. But regardless of that 720P ,in my view, looks pretty good and is more than sufficient. But that's my perception and it's not a global fact.
Regular DVDs were only 480P and even Bluray is 720P, so whats bad about 720p, We always used Bluray and DVD and enjoyed them, so whats the big deal?
Blu-ray is not 720p lol, it’s very rare to have a Blu-ray less than 1080p. Even then, the bitrate would be miles ahead of Hulu’s 720pRegular DVDs were only 480P and even Bluray is 720P, so whats bad about 720p, We always used Bluray and DVD and enjoyed them, so whats the big deal?
You need the right hardware and yes Bluray is mostly 1080P, but its very hard to tell the difference unless you have quality equipment. 720P is great, we watched DVD for years and were happy. I am very happy with Hulu at 720 and Disney at the same. So are many others here, some are always wanting more and if it was possible, and I am not saying it isn't, the developers will decide that, I think the program is great as is. The proof is that you are here, so you must love the program. I mean you spent your money on it, right?Blu-ray is not 720p lol, it’s very rare to have a Blu-ray less than 1080p. Even then, the bitrate would be miles ahead of Hulu’s 720p
Actually in the early days of blu-ray YES IT WAS. It's the very first type of HD video and officially called HD-Ready. HD-Ready is the direct predecessor to FULL-HD (1080p).Blu-ray is not 720p lol, it’s very rare to have a Blu-ray less than 1080p. Even then, the bitrate would be miles ahead of Hulu’s 720p
Blu-ray is not 720p lol, it’s very rare to have a Blu-ray less than 1080p. Even then, the bitrate would be miles ahead of Hulu’s 720p
I can tell. Especially if you watch sports e.g. soccer. I agree- for movies it is hard to tell especially since many TVs upscale HD toUHD.The blu-ray standard does not dictate 1080p. It supports a range of resolutions as low as 480i. You even admitted so yourself. "very rare" is not the same thing as doesn't exist.
Also, all this obsession with uber high resolution and bit rate is utter nonsense. I seriously doubt you can tell the different between 720p and 1080p, sitting back a proper distance from the TV. I'm sure you and others will chime in to assert you can, but I (and science) don't believe you. Heck, I can barely tell the difference from a properly upscaled DVD vs a blu-ray of the same movie when I sit a proper distance from the TV. It's all placebo and "gotta have the best" mentality.
DrX
Yes you can compare, you can compare anything, actually, you can hardly tell the difference without using useless tools to tell you what the res is. The whole idea is to enjoy the movie, and I can enjoy a 720P movie even more than I can a 1080P because its taking up less space on my storage drive.errrrm, no. you cant sompare bluray 720p and something providers compressed the hell out of, which is understandable (it saves them moneys). my 6cents.
I seriously doubt you can tell the different between 720p and 1080p, sitting back a proper distance from the TV. I'm sure you and others will chime in to assert you can, but I (and science) don't believe you.
DrX
You are joking right? Because this is actually funny. This is not any science project, its a movie to watch and enjoy, you are really joking with us, right?first of all. science is a social construct and therefore a lie, perpetrated by white patriarchy. second of all, i suggest you go to amazon prime video,
first of all. science is a social construct and therefore a lie
Amen to that Doc.Science by definition is falsifiable. I'm not even going to bother with the rest of your rant after that nonsense.
The simple answer to that is " Don't use Hulu as a provider and forget about it. I think it looks better than good, excellent would be my term, but I only want to watch the movie.720p looks awful. That's the fact.
The blu-ray standard does not dictate 1080p. It supports a range of resolutions as low as 480i. You even admitted so yourself. "very rare" is not the same thing as doesn't exist.
Also, all this obsession with uber high resolution and bit rate is utter nonsense. I seriously doubt you can tell the different between 720p and 1080p, sitting back a proper distance from the TV. I'm sure you and others will chime in to assert you can, but I (and science) don't believe you. Heck, I can barely tell the difference from a properly upscaled DVD vs a blu-ray of the same movie when I sit a proper distance from the TV. It's all placebo and "gotta have the best" mentality.
DrX
Then I guess 100s of members have vision issues Dr Sally, just joking, why can't people that enjoy 720P and Hulu enjoy it and you just don't have to watch it. I love Hulu , yes 720 P is just as good as 1080P to me. All I want to do is enjoy a good film, not break down every aspect of the recording. I suggest politely that you just don't watch it. it's much better than the old DVD format. So yes, I am thankful to have Hulu at 720P.I know Blu-ray isn’t a set resolution, red fox said it was 720p as fact so I corrected that. And it’s painfully obvious if something is 720p or 1080p or 2160p if you have a nice 4K TV. Good for you that you can’t tell I guess? That suggests more of a vision problem than anything
I know Blu-ray isn’t a set resolution, red fox said it was 720p as fact so I corrected that. And it’s painfully obvious if something is 720p or 1080p or 2160p if you have a nice 4K TV. Good for you that you can’t tell I guess? That suggests more of a vision problem than anything