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Steve Grauman
June 27th 03, 10:25 AM
I'm in the market for an HDTV. I've been looking at tube sets between 32 and 40
inches, mainly Sony's upcoming 34" 16:9 widescreen set (XBR910). I was
wondering if anyone knew of an HD-tube in this size range that had an IEEE
input on it. I know that Panasonic's 34" 16:9 does not (no matter, the red push
on the Panasonic sets bothers me) and that Toshiba's 34" 16:9 Cinema Series set
does not. I'm not sure about the Samsung or Sony models I've been looking at. I
know that "Firewire" is an Apple computer term and that i.Link is a Sony term,
but they seem to all be the same port beyond that, is this correct?

MCL
June 27th 03, 06:17 PM
As far as the televisions go, I have no clue...

But, yes, FireWire and i.Link are the same thing...
Both are IEEE 1394 compliant...

Good luck in your search,
Mark

"Steve Grauman" > wrote in message
...
> I'm in the market for an HDTV. I've been looking at tube sets between 32
and 40
> inches, mainly Sony's upcoming 34" 16:9 widescreen set (XBR910). I was
> wondering if anyone knew of an HD-tube in this size range that had an IEEE
> input on it. I know that Panasonic's 34" 16:9 does not (no matter, the red
push
> on the Panasonic sets bothers me) and that Toshiba's 34" 16:9 Cinema
Series set
> does not. I'm not sure about the Samsung or Sony models I've been looking
at. I
> know that "Firewire" is an Apple computer term and that i.Link is a Sony
term,
> but they seem to all be the same port beyond that, is this correct?

Doug
June 30th 03, 03:42 AM
Just curious, why do you want such a connection on your TV?

Doug

--
Why watch it when you can Replay it?
Replay ID 00004-54831-74727


"Steve Grauman" > wrote in message
...
> I'm in the market for an HDTV. I've been looking at tube sets between 32
and 40
> inches, mainly Sony's upcoming 34" 16:9 widescreen set (XBR910). I was
> wondering if anyone knew of an HD-tube in this size range that had an IEEE
> input on it. I know that Panasonic's 34" 16:9 does not (no matter, the red
push
> on the Panasonic sets bothers me) and that Toshiba's 34" 16:9 Cinema
Series set
> does not. I'm not sure about the Samsung or Sony models I've been looking
at. I
> know that "Firewire" is an Apple computer term and that i.Link is a Sony
term,
> but they seem to all be the same port beyond that, is this correct?

Steve Grauman
June 30th 03, 04:37 AM
<< Just curious, why do you want such a connection on your TV? >>

I'm interested in borrowing the D-VHS deck a friend of mine has, and I'm fairly
sure that IEE1394 components will become more prevalent in the months/years to
come.

Chuck Edwards
July 1st 03, 08:00 PM
"Steve Grauman" > wrote in message
...
> << Just curious, why do you want such a connection on your TV? >>
>
> I'm interested in borrowing the D-VHS deck a friend of mine has, and I'm
fairly
> sure that IEE1394 components will become more prevalent in the
months/years to
> come.
The IEEE 1394 plug would be on the HD tuner, unless the TV had an HD tuner
built-in, most don't. If your friend has the JVC DVHS, it has component
outputs which would connect to most HDTVs for tape playback.

Doug
July 2nd 03, 01:39 AM
Yes they will output 1080i. Fantastic picture.

Doug

--
Why watch it when you can Replay it?
Replay ID 00004-54831-74727


"Steve Grauman" > wrote in message
...
> << The IEEE 1394 plug would be on the HD tuner, unless the TV had an HD
tuner
> built-in, most don't. If your friend has the JVC DVHS, it has component
> outputs which would connect to most HDTVs for tape playback. >>
>
> I was originally told that the only way to get the 1080i playback from
JVC's
> D-VHS deck was through an IEEE port. Will the component inputs allow 1080i
> playback?

Steve Grauman
July 2nd 03, 04:00 AM
<< Yes they will output 1080i. Fantastic picture. >>

Is there any difference in picture quality between D-VHS connected via IEEE and
D-VHS connected via component?

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