Technically yes, thier are mid-range 1080p DLP TVs on the market now from Mitsibishi, Samsung, Toshiba, and HP. Although they display 1080p, most don't except 1080p signals. The HP DLP does though! ------------------------------- HP http://h10058.www1.hp.com/digital/entertainment/us/en/theater/tvs/mdtv_guide.html#connect Samsung http://product.samsung.com/cgi-bin/...=&prod_id=HLR6768WX/XAA&selTab=Specifications Mistsubishi http://www.mitsubishi-tv.com/televisions/details.asp?id=196 Toshiba http://www.tacp.toshiba.com/televisions/product.asp?model=52HM84 ------------------------------- In order to maximize the use of and the cost of bandwith broadcasters won't offer 1080p programming (for free). Also the next gen optical players and gaming consoles will offer true 1080p resolutions. The main source for true high definition though is the PC. Video cards with DVI connections offer the best possible quality and quantity HD content. There is also alot of HD content in the D-VHS format (via FireWire). ------------------------------- WMV-HD http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/content_provider/film/ContentShowcase.aspx Apple (AVC/H.264) http://www.apple.com/quicktime/guide/hd/ Divx-HD http://www.divx.com/movies/browse.php?categoryID=3&src=movietab_hd_from__movies_index_ D-VHS (JVC) http://www.jvc.com/product.jsp?mode...oduct.jsp?modelId=MODL027314&pathId=50&page=1 HD D-VHS movies: http://www.dvhsmovieguide.com/dvhs_result.php?listtype=0 ------------------------------- Ced