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So. . .This Is Blu-ray?
It's rare that a product will get journalists from different publications all calling each other—and by rare I mean never. But that's what happened with Samsung's BD-P1000. There have been calls back and forth between different magazines, then different manufacturers. Even content providers have been keeping the phone lines busy for the past few weeks. At first, it was to see if everyone was seeing the same things, stemming from disbelief. Then, it was thoughts on what was going on. Next, it was trying to find answers. And it all started with this little DVD, er, Blu-ray player. (See my full review on page 126.)
Pop the Top
Apparently, a noise-reduction feature on the Genesis chip was activated, and this is what softens the image. According to Samsung, they are working on revising the settings on the chip, and future production models will have these revised settings. Ideally, this will also mean that there will be a downloadable firmware update for current players. As of this writing, though, there were no firm dates on either.
As for the 1080p-to-1080i-to-1080p stages, if the Samsung does it correctly, the only real casualty will be the lack of a 1080p/24 output. But, without visual confirmation that the softness issue is just this noise-reduction "feature," we can't take anything for granted. I guess the irony here is that the people who coughed up the extra money to get a TV with 1080p inputs still have the same number of conversions in the chain as the people who own 1080p displays that can only input 1080i (because, with the former, deinterlacing occurs in the player versus in the TV, as with the latter).
So?
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