SaltBoy,
So I see you have the same Samsung widescreen TV that i eventually want to purchase...mainly for widescreen gaming...
So was it worth your money???
How come there is overscan if 1280 by 720 is a resolution listed in the tv's manual?( I acquired it off their site)
and, with the DVI can you achieve any resolution? Like 1280 x 768 800 x 600 etc...
thanks
First off to anybody -- what's the best way to take screenshots? I keep on doing Alt-PrintScrn, but that only lets me get one at a time, and Alt-Tabbing out of SCPT crashes my system
Second, Oscar -- There is so much about the HLN437W that I love. The picture is beautiful, it's easy to use, and the high-resolution video kicks some serious butt. DLP is the way to go, if you got the money.
Out of the box, a DVI connection provides two resolutions -- 800x600 and 1280x720. The Samsung works only in 16:9 or 4:3 mode, so a resolution such as 1280x768 would be impossible. Besides, why would you want a 16:10 mode? ;)
However, the overscan is a problem, yet probably the only problem, that I have with the TV. The native resolution of the HLN437W is 720p (1280x720), but about 4% of the outside pixels are NOT shown in that mode. As a result, in Windows, the Start button, the Min/Max/Close buttons, and the taskbar are partially cut off. They're still "there", they're just not 100% visible.
The amount of pixels you actually see on the screen is about 1220x688. The closest resolution to that that I can create with PowerStrip is 1216x684. There's a SLIGHT underscan at that resolution, but it is so negligible, you can't even see it unless you're really looking for it. The folks at AVSForum helped me set that up.
So, how does it work in the end? Personally, I think it works great. Although 1216x684 is a resolution that most people haven't heard of or tried, I've gotten it to work with all the games that I've tried -- Warcraft III, UT2K4, Splinter Cell, and SCPT. Of course, WC3 stretches the video, but everything else looks fantastic.
When I watch Hi-Definition video with my PC, I switch the resolution to 1280x720, since the source is usually 720p. Yes, some of the picture is lost, but then again, almost every tv has this issue. I just wish it weren't an issue with the Samsung, but there it is...