Post 1. is an accurate summary to most "normal" people's thought processes when they see widescreen material on their 4:3 tubes...
"It looks small" my mother would say whereby I would launch into a rant explaining the ratios and how you're seeing the whole movie this way, not just half. Regardless of how good a job I do explaining it they still can't figure out why the black bars are there.
"I paid for the whole TV" my dad will inevitably say grumbling about the black bars taking up space where there should be content.
"Did you pay for the whole movie?" is my typical response. Then I go home and watch the movie on my widescreen!
The X-Fi3 keeps with the company's commitment to audio fidelity, thanks to the apt-X codec, which supposedly offers audio quality similar to a wired connection when streaming. On that front, the device also handles FLAC files.
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Post 1. is an accurate summary to most "normal" people's thought processes when they see widescreen material on their 4:3 tubes...
"It looks small" my mother would say whereby I would launch into a rant explaining the ratios and how you're seeing the whole movie this way, not just half. Regardless of how good a job I do explaining it they still can't figure out why the black bars are there.
"I paid for the whole TV" my dad will inevitably say grumbling about the black bars taking up space where there should be content.
"Did you pay for the whole movie?" is my typical response. Then I go home and watch the movie on my widescreen!