QUOTE(redwolf @ Jan 19 2006, 11:19 PM)

falsh or unclear statement, as it is not PS3, but the HDMI technology is uncapable transfer 60fps at 1080p. though hdmi.org doesn't officialy mention this to be true or false.

None of my statements were unclear or false, they were very explicit, clear and based on fact. Just because you have an HDMI interface doesn't mean that the display device can handle the incoming stream of data at twice the capacity it was designed to handle.
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but Sony did state that PS3 is capable of 1080p @ 60fps (i know they can bullshit, but so can any other organisation) and while searching i found this:
1080p60, only it is running with 12bit color. That is 16 levels of Red, Blue and Green for a spectacular 4096 colors total. For 1080p60 it comes down to bandwidth and signal processing power, there simply isn't enough available to deliver 1080p60. You need to decrease frame rate, decrease color depth, decrease resolution or increase compression to stay in spec of the standards. Sure Sony can make custom non-standard hardware that can do whatever resolution, color depth, frame rate and compression, but in the real world everyone will be following the standards. You can't just add a more intensive compression algorith or more bandwidth utilization and still have standard compliant displays still work properly. 1080p60 is a fantasy in the console world, and it will not be something that even targeted by developers for years to come.
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While some material will be produced and delivered at 1080p 60fps most of the HD in the foreseeable future will be in the ATSC standards of 1080i 30fps or 1080p 30fps. That means that the display must convert the 1080p 30fps material to 60fps via some sort of up-conversion (or line interpolation) process in order to add another 1/60th of a second's worth of 1080 lines to emulate 60fps.
Nice quote, especially when you put it in context in the conclusion of the same article:
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Many question why they should buy a display that exceed the ATSC standard, (which limits HD to 720p 60 or 1080i 60)? Isn't something that will display 1080i good enough? Pete Putman, noted display analysts, tells buyers "1080p is a waste of your money".