"The question though, is more resolution always a good thing?"
It's a good question. Some might say "no". I would say yes.
If you have it, there are many ways to control it to one's tastes via tweaks, etc.
If you don't have it, you do not know what you are missing, so one cannot be in a position to judge.
That's just how I look at it practically.
Here's an interesting scenario to consider. Say one has resolution but results are unpleasant. Is resolution the cause or is this a case of shooting the messenger? How can one pin the blame on resolution conclusively?
Medusa is still ugly, even in HD. A lot goes into production to make it look good on HD TV. But I'd bet few who care would give up their HD TVs and go back to something less resolving. Not to say they might not play with filter/picture control tweaks at their disposal.
HD TV and modern digital audio are pretty much analogous in terms of what works best, what does not, and how to maximize utility to consumers.
OR, is there anyone out there if given the choice would choose to have less than 20/20 vision? How about hearing problems that limit what one might hear otherwise? Food for thought....
I would rather focus in conjunction on effectively minimizing noise and distortion and maximizing resolution in order to achieve best results possible. Nothing too radical there, I think?
It's a good question. Some might say "no". I would say yes.
If you have it, there are many ways to control it to one's tastes via tweaks, etc.
If you don't have it, you do not know what you are missing, so one cannot be in a position to judge.
That's just how I look at it practically.
Here's an interesting scenario to consider. Say one has resolution but results are unpleasant. Is resolution the cause or is this a case of shooting the messenger? How can one pin the blame on resolution conclusively?
Medusa is still ugly, even in HD. A lot goes into production to make it look good on HD TV. But I'd bet few who care would give up their HD TVs and go back to something less resolving. Not to say they might not play with filter/picture control tweaks at their disposal.
HD TV and modern digital audio are pretty much analogous in terms of what works best, what does not, and how to maximize utility to consumers.
OR, is there anyone out there if given the choice would choose to have less than 20/20 vision? How about hearing problems that limit what one might hear otherwise? Food for thought....
I would rather focus in conjunction on effectively minimizing noise and distortion and maximizing resolution in order to achieve best results possible. Nothing too radical there, I think?