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Konradx

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Oct 19, 2005
288
1
Toronto, Canada
So i just got my new 24" iMac any every widescreen ive put in has big black bars just like on my non widescreen monitors. I tried various 16:9, 16:10 movies but none fit the screen.

Anyway to watch them in full screen without cutting off the left and right parts of the movie? Is there a specific aspect raito that fits the iMacs?
 

ripfrankwhite

macrumors regular
Dec 13, 2005
184
5
Konradx said:
So i just got my new 24" iMac any every widescreen ive put in has big black bars just like on my non widescreen monitors. I tried various 16:9, 16:10 movies but none fit the screen.

Anyway to watch them in full screen without cutting off the left and right parts of the movie? Is there a specific aspect raito that fits the iMacs?

You do realize that the resolution of a 24" iMac is a lot higher than a DVD, don't you? That is the problem. An iMac is 1920x1200 and a DVD is ~720x480.
 

Eithanius

macrumors 68000
Nov 19, 2005
1,556
419
Konradx said:
So i just got my new 24" iMac any every widescreen ive put in has big black bars just like on my non widescreen monitors. I tried various 16:9, 16:10 movies but none fit the screen.

Anyway to watch them in full screen without cutting off the left and right parts of the movie? Is there a specific aspect raito that fits the iMacs?

8:5....
 

pengu

macrumors 6502a
Mar 20, 2005
575
0
Diddily Daddily...
"widescreen" resolutions for computers are almost always 16:10, which is slightly taller than "normal" widescreen for a widescreen tv (16:9)

if you play a 16:9 video fullscreen, you will see small black bars top and bottom.
if you play a 4:3 video fullscreen, you will see black bars left and right.

you can make MacOSX zoom in, but i dont know why you would want to, because it would cut off the left and ride sides of the image.
 

ipoddin

macrumors 65816
Jan 6, 2004
1,138
200
Los Angeles
Konradx said:
So i just got my new 24" iMac any every widescreen ive put in has big black bars just like on my non widescreen monitors. I tried various 16:9, 16:10 movies but none fit the screen.

Anyway to watch them in full screen without cutting off the left and right parts of the movie? Is there a specific aspect raito that fits the iMacs?

You may very well be watching movies shot in "anamorphic" and not widescreen. Widescreen monitors like the iMac, and even HDTV's for instance, are 16:9, or in other words 1.85:1. Anamorphic movies are even wider at 2.35:1. So if you watch a movie shot in anamorphic (and many are) even on a 16:9 screen like the imac or a plasma tv, it will STILL be letterboxed. Happens on my HDTV all the time. Nothing you can do about it. Read the back of the DVD boxes to see if it tells you which ratio the film was shot in.

Read more about it here.
 

balamw

Moderator emeritus
Aug 16, 2005
19,365
979
New England
Eithanius said:
FWIW 8:5 is also known as 16:10 which the OP says he tried. :p

Even some HD trailers and such will have a more extreme aspect ratio than the natural 16:9 of their standards... Find some full resolution 16:9 1080p samples to check out your screen, but you'll still have thin black bars at the top and bottom...

B
 

tomacintosh

macrumors 6502
Aug 25, 2005
266
39
I'm glad the iMac's use 16:10 to be honest, I think it'd look stupid with a 16:9 screen aspect. You need a bit of height for most programs
 

Konradx

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Oct 19, 2005
288
1
Toronto, Canada
ripfrankwhite said:
You do realize that the resolution of a 24" iMac is a lot higher than a DVD, don't you? That is the problem. An iMac is 1920x1200 and a DVD is ~720x480.

I downloaded the 1080p trailers off Apple Trailers and it also didnt fit the screen. I realize DVD resolution is alot smaller.

And i tried 2.4:1 which is anamorphic, and 2.35:1 (says enhanced for 16x9 Telivisions) and also didnt fit. Im gonna look for a 1.85:1 and see how it looks.

Thanks for all the feedback,

Konrad

edit: I put on Sin City and it has minimal bars (its 1.85:1). It sucks like 90% of my movies are either 2.35:1 or 2.4:1. If there a reason for so many different aspect ratios?
 

balamw

Moderator emeritus
Aug 16, 2005
19,365
979
New England
Konradx said:
If there a reason for so many different aspect ratios?
Artistic vision, and the fact that there are many aspect ratios of screens in movie theaters. The wider it is the more enveloping the experience, like Cinerama at 2.59:1

B
 

Pressure

macrumors 603
May 30, 2006
5,179
1,544
Denmark
Tried some HD 1080p clips from Apple trailers and it looks great on this 23" Apple Cinema Display.

WidescreenHD.png


Sorry about the large size, haven't installed Photoshop CS2 yet...
 

JAT

macrumors 603
Dec 31, 2001
6,473
124
Mpls, MN
Konradx said:
It sucks like 90% of my movies are either 2.35:1 or 2.4:1. If there a reason for so many different aspect ratios?
Why does it suck? You don't like immersive widescreen films? Who cares what shape your TV/monitor is, just watch the movie. I guess if "usage of all pixels in whatever screen happens to be here" is more important than the movie, you can zoom/stretch it however you like.

The reason for different aspects is TV. Originally everything was close to 4:3, a little more square perhaps. Then TV came out at the same shape and Hollywood decided they needed to look different. Widescreen was born and now they all use whatever their "vision" decides, as somebody above mentioned.
 

balamw

Moderator emeritus
Aug 16, 2005
19,365
979
New England
afornander said:
are the LCD's on the imacs acualy HD?
Define HD.

Even the 17" has higher resolution than many of the 720p LCD HDTVs out there in the market. The 24" is a bit taller than required for 1080i/p. (16:10 instead of 16:9).

B
 

ipoddin

macrumors 65816
Jan 6, 2004
1,138
200
Los Angeles
afornander said:
are the LCD's on the imacs acualy HD?

My guess is yes considering high def 1080i is 1920x1080 and the 24" is capable of 1920x1200. 720p is 1280x720 so the iMac can easily display this as well.
 
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