Rudy, your tv is hd. Every mfg measures vertical and horizontal pixels differently it appears. All the horizontal pixels are not necessarily used in the picture. I have a year old 40" that is 1360 x 768 and if you could see a ball game in HD on it you would believe it. As for 720 vs 1080 if you have a screen 40" or less there is no difference to the eye. Yours has built in tuner so you are in business. Believe the Samsung tech. Luck, Bob T ----- Original Message ----- From: "rudy" <rudylopeznc@xxxxxxxxx> To: <pctechtalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 2009 6:54 PM Subject: -=PCTechTalk=- Gman, others HD tv resolution question >G you helped me on the computer resolution, IIRC you do not watch tv but do > you/anyone here know tv specs? I'm looking at this unit that Cnet gives > great reviews: > http://reviews.cnet.com/flat-panel-tvs/samsung-ln32a450/4505-6482_7-32815310.html > > But I'm told by a electronic guru that 1366x768 is not even a High > Definition resolution. I spoke to Samsung and I told the lady that this > resolution wasn't true HD and she sent me to Level 2 tech. The guy said > yes, > indeed 1366x768 is 720P and true HD. And the more pixels the higher the > quality so 1366x768 is higher than 1280x720(true HD resolution) and even a > higher quality picture........whom to belive......... > Rudy > --------------------------------------------------------------- Please remember to trim your replies (including this sentence and everything below it) and adjust the subject line as necessary. To unsubscribe or change your email settings: //www.freelists.org/webpage/pctechtalk To access our Archives: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PCTechTalk/messages/ //www.freelists.org/archives/pctechtalk/ To contact only the PCTT Mod Squad, write to: pctechtalk-moderators@xxxxxxxxxxxxx To join the PCTableTalk off-topic group, send a blank email to: pctabletalk+subscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ---------------------------------------------------------------