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#1 |
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Banned
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: About to be evicted!!!!
Posts: 4,082
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Well my day had been shit up to now, but having seen JustRobert's post I have cheered up considerably. But how come, even though I live in the country of Dr Who, the first I hear of the new series is from the other side of the planet?
Can't see why the trailer is widescreen, as the series won't be. Sadly I had just disconnected my projector from the computer before coming here, so only saw it strip wise on the monitor (small academy ratio monitor), so I'll have to take another look when I have the projector hooked up to the computer again. |
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#2 |
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Women might be able to fake orgasms But men can fake whole relationships
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Fort Lauderdale, Fl
Posts: 2,408
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#3 |
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Banned
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: About to be evicted!!!!
Posts: 4,082
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Yes, I think since Steven Moffat took over (the BBC have wanted it in 1080 for even longer, but Russel T Davis always refused, when he left, Steven Moffat had no such reservations).
However I'm talking about aspect ratio. Most TVs are in 16:9 ratio and all modern TV shows are produced that size. That trailer was in 29:9, which is what us old 'uns call "widescreen". On a normal TV it will be letterboxed, like movies used to be when TVs were in 4:3 (academy ratio). Actually, I was on the XP box when I watched that trailer! Nothing as modern as 7 for me (my "up to date" machine is Vista). I was also watching it on an academy ratio monitor (4:3), which is a size TVs have not been for years. Weirdly, although I have a modern 16:9 TV my most modern TV is the projection TV which is 4:3. I'm guessing this is because, as well as projecting TV, DVD and BluRay, it also projects video and computer, both of which still mostly use academy ratio. And you can scale up a 29:9 if you are projecting in that format. |
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