ect5150 is correct. A bad upscale on Blu-ray can make it arguable if a good upscaling chipset can make a DVD look better than the Blu-ray. When you are talking about even a half decent native production... no.ect5150 wrote:Upscaling never adds information to the image, it's just an estimation. No combination of Bluray players, CPUs, TV filters can replace having more information on the disc. While some of the upscaling filters do a decent job sometimes, I've never seen an upscale that is as sharp as the Bluray can be (without sacrificing something else in the image that is... it's just another trade-off, like with grain removal and sharpness).Treklin wrote:A good and actual Blu-ray player with a strong and powerful CPU can achieve nearly the same quality as the FUNi Blu-rays but a slightly plus is the nearly 5% more image on the new FUNi Blu-rays and this you cannot achieve with the best up-to-date Blu-ray player!
Also, 'strong and powerful CPU' has nothing to do with it as far as Blu-ray players are concerned. Only one BD player I can think of does the majority of it's work in software, it's almost always decoder chips (if someone knows different feel free to correct me on this, but as far as I know there is ONE BD player on the market right now that is 'CPU based), most BD players have generally low end CPUs because they just aren't needed.