[citation][nom]The Schnoz[/nom]I don't care what the fuck you say, their is no upsampling in the world that makes DVD look as good as Blu-ray or HD-DVD. I have a HD-DVD player and Blu-ray hooked up to my 1080p 52". I have the PS3, Xbox 360, and an HTPC with WinDVD9, all hooked up to my TV with HDMI and all can upconvert DVD. I can say there's an improvement, but theres no way neear the quality of Blu-ray/HD-DVD, especially when said format is using AVC or VC-1. Blu-ray discs using MPEG2 suck ass though. The onyl thing I can think is either a.) you were standing too close to the tv in which case all plasmas look horrible or b.) you have no eye or taste for quality. Since you tested with 10,000B.C. I'm guessing its the latter.[/citation]
I actually laughed out loud at this. Oh yeah, I heard there's some lame acronym for doing that. I have to admit, DVDs upscaled onto a 720P projector look way better than they did on 800x600. But I watched Casino Royale (newer) on PS3 both on blu ray and DVD, same time on a 63" Mitsu rear projection TV. You'd have to be blind not to see the huge improvement in resolution on Blu-Ray. The whole movie was enhanced - to be honest it was almost too real, almost painful to watch. Plus the TV's lamp level was set too high. But as they say, you don't know what you're missing - I still am watching upscaled DVDs and no one is bitching because they are too busy watching the movie. We used to watch VHS on crappy tube TVs and after a few minutes, if the flick was any good, you were totally engrossed. Now don't ge me wrong, I love going out to the big screen, and I look forward to setting up a Blu-Ray HTPC once the funds are in. But reality is upscaled DVDs look kick ass and for a good reason. Many of us older guys and gals grew up on VHS and when DVDs came out, no one was watching them on 480 lines of resolution. For many, a 1080p or 720p set is the first device capable of displaying even 480p natively. DVDs in that sense were years ahead of their time. And be honest, how many people actually watch movies with 5.1 speakers and not just the crappy stereo speakers built in to even decent big screen TVs? When I first set up my cheap HTIB 5.1 setup, I couldn't believe how good it sounded compared to the old 2 speaker no sub. When friends come over to watch a movie for the first time, all I hear is how amazing the projector looks and how good the sound is. This is a 3 year old $900 720P Mitsu HD1000u projector and about $200 in speakers, not exactly top of the line.
The DVD is just now being appreciated - Blu-Ray probably won't be appreciated by the masses for another 5 years.