1080I or P is approximately 6 times the amount of data od standard NTSC. VHS could resolve about 240 lines of resolution (in the same 525 scan lines that DVD has, but DVD can resolve about 500 lines of resolution on the same horizontal scan line). So it would seem that numerically, Bluray is a bigger jump from DVD than VHS was to DVD.
I did watch some blurays on a 42" 1080P set, and thought too that the difference was not so great, but then getting the player home on my close to 14 foot screen, there is simply no comparison. Now that I have the BDP-83 I was excited to see the DVD upscaling, and while good, is no way anywhere near the quality of bluray.
moderate sized LCD's simply don't reveal the HD signal in all it's glory.
I am not yet listening to the uncompressed HD audio tracks, but even Dolby digital on bluray uses higher bitrates, ans the audio improvement is evident on 2 different players I have used.
As far as higher resolution than HD, Red ray is a 4K distribution format on disk that will be meant for digital cinemas, not the home consumer.
I did watch some blurays on a 42" 1080P set, and thought too that the difference was not so great, but then getting the player home on my close to 14 foot screen, there is simply no comparison. Now that I have the BDP-83 I was excited to see the DVD upscaling, and while good, is no way anywhere near the quality of bluray.
moderate sized LCD's simply don't reveal the HD signal in all it's glory.
I am not yet listening to the uncompressed HD audio tracks, but even Dolby digital on bluray uses higher bitrates, ans the audio improvement is evident on 2 different players I have used.
As far as higher resolution than HD, Red ray is a 4K distribution format on disk that will be meant for digital cinemas, not the home consumer.