QUOTE(pcfreakx @ Mar 5 2006, 05:59 PM)

Keep in mind that HDMI version 1.3 that will support 1080p hasn't even been ratified so this is a significantly new thing they are doing. And every Blu-Ray player on the floor (except for Samsung's first model) supports true 1080p. NONE OF THE HD-DVD PLAYERS SUPPORT 1080P. And many TV's this year will support true 1080p in. The Blu-Ray camp have gone after a significantly different level of video performance. 1080/24psf (profressive segmented frames) is the format which hollywood digitally archives their films and that same quality will be delivered on the first Blu-Ray players.
Your post was absolutely fantastic... except for this part I quoted. You are massively overstating and mistaken about the significance of 1080p on BR discs and players.
You will not see a difference between 1080PsF24 and 1080i60 with 3:2 pulldown removed. They are 100% identical when viewed on the TV set. Because the telecine (inside an HD-DVD player) and the inverse telecine (inside the TV set) take place in a digital, uncompressed domain. It is a lossless process. Long story short, a native 1080p24 output is pretty much useless for a consumer and will give you no benefit whatsoever over 1080i w/ 3:2 pulldown added.
BluRay is supposed to support 1080p60 if I'm not mistaken. That is what the significant "1080p advantage" is. Of course this applies to games only, since there is no film or television content yet shot at 1080p60 (nor should there ever be - the look of 24fps is what defines motion pictures). Maybe live events, TV shows, educational stuff, IMAX stuff - you might eventually see stuff like that produced on 1080p60 (once the cameras actually become available which right now they are not). But regular movies are 24fps so a 1080i60 signal is all you need to display that format with perfection.