Early this year we bought an HDTV receiver for my house at about $200.
It was the biggest waste of money we have spent on household equipment.
Judging by the hype surrounding HDTV, you would expect that switching
from standard broadcast to HD would bring a noticeable difference in
quality that somehow makes the entire television experience better.
This is not so. There is a slight improvement in quality. When I stop
paying attention to the show I am watching and focus instead on the
picture quality, then (and only then) the thought runs through my mind,
"Hey, I see an improvement. The light reflecting off of that guy's
forehead is clearer."
The thing is, once the picture quality reaches a certain level, my
enjoyment of the television is founded completely upon the quality of
the content. For me, that level of picture quality has been reached
with standard television, and once I start watching a show (or playing
a game) I don't notice the improved picture quality.
Note that I am talking about my experience on a 60 inch screen. Even on
this large screen the difference is not something that I notice.
Another thing is that HDTV does not have ease of use going for it. With
regular programming I can easily turn on the TV and flip through
channels. With HDTV I need to turn on the TV, boot up the HD receiver,
and then begin flipping through channels which take at least twice as
long to load as regular channels. Furthermore, both HD and standard
programming are included in the channel list, so I am not guaranteed
that the channel I find is even using the higher quality version.
Frankly, I don't see HDTV becoming readily adopted by everyday people.
Even with the big push for HD from the Xbox360 and Playstation 3, and
the looming switch to HD programming in the US, I just don't see it
becoming widespread anytime soon.
I'd like to close with a quote I just pulled from a recent update on
Bungie.net. This quote is in reference to the upcoming Halo 3, one of
the most anticipated games for Microsoft's Xbox360 console (as I
mentioned above Microsoft has been pushing HDTV compatibility):
"The more detailed character
models look surprisingly good on SD TV sets too. I had kind of assumed
that they would be best appreciated on an HD set, but the fact is that
the extra shadow, detail and realism looks every bit as impressive on
our crappy old 14 inch test sets."