CNBC HD is actually HD for the first time tonight
Looking for something watch once the President Obama press conference is over? If CNBC HD+ is in the channel lineup, click over to check out the channel's first true high definition production Cruise Inc: Big Money On The High Seas at 9 p.m. It's the first of several documentaries apparently planned in HD, and not a moment too soon. Taking advantage of the addition space HDTVs can provide (as pictured above) has been nice, but it's good to know we didn't have to go all Jon Stewart on them to get some real HD.
[Via Media Bistro]
[Via Media Bistro]
























Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Funke, Tobias Dr. @ Mar 24th 2009 10:18PM
Hopefully Bloomberg HD isn't too far off.
NoAndThen @ Mar 24th 2009 11:37PM
Yeah, nothing like global recession... in HD!
Funke, Tobias Dr. @ Mar 24th 2009 11:44PM
There really isn't.
"...because only if you have been in the deepest valley can you ever know how magnificent it is to be at the highest mountain." -Richard Milhous Nixon
zephead @ Mar 24th 2009 11:58PM
If more HD stations start actually using the 16:9 frame instead of keeping everything in the 4:3 "safe zone", that would be awesome. It might even convince people to un-stretch their TVs!
Joebnsd @ Mar 25th 2009 12:02AM
In other news... Host Jim Cramer of CNBC's Mad Money hypes Standard Def TV's as a "Strong Buy" =/
Money Mike @ Mar 26th 2009 9:18AM
"Looking for something watch once..."
"Taking advantage of the addition space..."
How has the editor of this site not been fired? If there isn't one, you guys desperately need one. This is pathetic. I don't know what tool you use to write your blogs, but you should use (or at least paste it into) MS Word and run a spelling & grammar check before submitting it here. If the goal is to get the story up as quick as possible, the least you could do is proofread and correct the mistakes after it's up. This was posted two days ago, so there's no excuse as to why it still has errors.
Seriously, these mistakes make your site look unprofessional.