720i doesn't even exist (look it up). 720p refers to a widescreen resolution of 1280x720. NTSC runs much closer to 480i (which is a digital standard which is closely related to NTSC), which does have 720 *columns*. You get roughly 640x480 out of a normal NTSC TV, though the safely viewable area on most tube TVs is slightly smaller.
The reason why the standards are referenced by rows is because you interlace on rows, not columns. The viewable column count is determined by the aspect ratio applied to the rows.
~Bradley
Luke -Jr wrote:
On Thursday 16 August 2007, Leo Mauler wrote:
I received it as AVI (XviD video, MP3 audio). Frankly I don't really care about the final quality as long as the human eye can be fooled into thinking that it looks nice on a conventional television.
That's hard enough with a digitally mastered DVD, let alone something that's been transcoded already. Unless "nice" means something like "shoddy broadcast quality" ;)
That is, a television which is not widescreen, and can be described *without* using the numbers 720 or 1080.
PAL? That's Europe only, isn't it? ;)
(classic NTSC has always been 720i) _______________________________________________ Kclug mailing list Kclug@kclug.org http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug