Mikey.666 wrote:I'm not a TV wizz here, so correct me if I'm wrong. But it appears that the bigger TV sceens get, the worse the quality is, often sh!t. It gets very pixelated and often freezes a lot, I don't think this is the case with regular big TV's but I think it is with plasma or flat screen, or HD, actually, I'm not entirely sure what HD is...
Mikey
T'is nowt to do with size. It's quality. Upscaling and freezing are inherent features of low-end stuff.
Digital TV upscaling can cause pixellation, which wasn't apparent so much on old CRT screens, which had a much more gentle and soft natural scaling. Even rear projection screens or LCD projectors look better than modern expensive LCD or plasma.
HD eliminates this to some extent, but is so poorly supported.
If going for a plasma or large (32" or bigger) LCD, look out for the '1080' resolution, and the 'upscaling'. Some have filters which help, but it's never going to be perfect.
In the future, this may change... but bear in mind that most TV broadcasts, movies, DVDs etc. are designed for 625 vertical scanlines of info... on much higher resolution plasma and LCD, these scanlines look lego-bricked. Only when true HD broadcasting comes of age will you take advantage of the huge resolutions the modern TVs have to offer.
Here's a fact: We bought a 42" plasma TV for our living room. Aside from the fact it was over-huge, we returned it because the actual quality of standard broadcasts was dire. What miffed me most is that the set was mis-sold in store—it had obviously been hooked up to a HD DVD player on a 'showreel' loop. The actual quality when we got home made me question my eyesight.
My advice is to wait. Personally, I'd rather have the TV small and crisp.