Mike Skerritt wrote:Thanks for responding, Eric.
I guess the main question is whether 720p really provides a difference I can see when the native resolution on the discs is 1080p, which my TV's aren't capable of.
Not really. The only way you'd see serious differences is if you were running some kind of large front projection system with at least 70 inches on up.
The thing that's going to be the big difference here for you and frankly most other people is this:
Like DVD, obviously, you have good BD discs and not so good BD discs. Good BD discs are supposed to be remastered from the ground up and eveything runs at a much higher bit rate on both audio and video than DVD could ever imagine.
It's REAL high definition, so even if you're not running at 1080p (I'm not either) believe me, you're in for a treat.
I run my BD on a 34 inch widescreen CRT Tube, the Sony KD 34- XBR960. I'm at 1080i and I see broadcast HD at both 720p and 1080i and even from across the room I can see differences between HD material vs. not HD material even though there's no 1080p involved at all.
There's a LOT of marketing hype about 1080p because they want to sell players and TV's. That's fine for what it is. 1080p is awesome if you have it but no, the difference between 720p and 1080p is not anywhere remotely close to the difference between HD vs. non HD, so proceed with confidence.
Some of the marketing hype makes it sound like 1080p is the only "real" high definition and that simply isn't true.
Anything from 720p on up is real high definition.
If I felt it was worth it the budget wouldn't be a HUGE concern (though we just bought a condo, so I'm not talking about several hundred dollars here). Many friends have told me to just get a PS3, and that's $400. On the whole I'd consider that reasonable, but again, only if there's less of a downgrade in difference between 720p and 1080p than there is an upgrade between standard def and what my TV's can pump out, if that makes sense.
It's not a downgrade like that at all and I second the advice: Get the 40 gig PS3 for $399 and call it a day unless you really need analog audio outputs, which I personally didn't, in which case I'd say get a Panasonic DMP-BD30.
http://www.blu-ray.com/players/players.php?id=5
With whatever you get, if you can do it, you'll want to keep the player connected to the Internet for the convenience of firmware/software updates which enable more features, etc.
If not viable, you can get firmware discs. There's always a way to get it done.
EDIT: Some new players from Sony and Pioneer are coming soon.
http://www.blu-ray.com/players/players.php?id=62
^^ This could be a candidate for you if you didn't want a PS3 at that price point. If you wait and play some haggling, you probably will see some sales. That's just list price. You know how it works with electronics.
http://www.blu-ray.com/players/players.php?id=63
^^ In the Fall.
http://www.blu-ray.com/players/players.php?id=37
http://www.blu-ray.com/players/players.php?id=71
^^ More expensive but I'm seeing advanced good word of mouth on forums like AVS.
All told, the PS3 is probably your best, all around bet unless again you really NEED analog outputs.