Has anyone compared the quality of HD TV shows offered on the AppleTV to the quality of the same shows delivered on cable? Is there generally more or less visible compression artifacts?
Apple TV, though it claims 720p, is more like digital cable widescreen. Good, but it's not going to please someone used to HD channels on cable.
Generally cable is better.
Apple TV, though it claims 720p, is more like digital cable widescreen. Good, but it's not going to please someone used to HD channels on cable.
I'm not expecting Apple HD to compete with blu-ray... I'm more interested if it is better than typical cable HD
Properly encoded - Yes. Most users use Handbrake (x264) or a derivative of FFmpeg; these are not the greatest encoders on the market, but they do what most people want, and that is, to get video from the computer to the AppleTV pretty quickly. The following was encoded using compressor 3.5 + AppleTV preset. Take it for what it's worth.
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Has anyone compared the quality of HD TV shows offered on the AppleTV to the quality of the same shows delivered on cable? Is there generally more or less visible compression artifacts?
Bottom line: a great deal of this on an individual basis is "eye of the beholder", meaning the only way to get a good answer is to test it and judge it yourself, on your own TV, using your own cable system andTV. If the outcome would affect your
TV buying decision, just keep your receipt.
Check this out for a decent comparison:
apple-tv-20-vs-blu-ray-dvd-hd-cable-the-comparison/
Mind you in NZ we have 1080i encoded with H.264 at a high bitrate with DVB-T, so that beats the pants off of Apples HD, but most of the world doesn't have that advantage.
Cheers, Ed.
What I've just posted is exactly the quality you'll get from Itunes. Not better, not worst. These are encoded with Apples own AppleTV settings.
Sadly I do not advocate downloading episodes or movies. That's between you and your conscious. As for me, I could care less where you get your entertainment from.