
I suggest viewing them at multiple stores and adjusting the displays you are examining to the "Pro" or "Movie" modes, which are more accurate image wise and will eliminate a lot of the artificialness (is that a word) of the image. The blue tinted grayscale is the worst offender, since most people will view an image with higher contrast (white) and brightness (black level) than correct. Just an idea.
I have the SXRD, and looking at the default "Vivid" or even "Standard" settings when compared to my calibrated "Pro" settings is painful to view. You lose so much detail and color fidelity it's amazing. The image isn't as "sharp", but believe me, the difference is truly night and day.
*One thing about PIP, which seems to be a bit of a deal breaker. Most of the current displays only allow one HD source to be displayed, so you can't use HDMI cable and component inputs to be viewed PIP, or two components, etc. The SXRD and the DLP I owned were one HD source and one SD source (either S-Video or composite). I believe this kind of arrangement is standard, so unless you want to view digital camera slideshows or have your camcorder plugged in...PIP probably isn't going to be that big of a deal (or you game using the old yellow composite input). Just a thought.*
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