The answer seems to be two part. If you have an old CRT type of TV screen then the answer is yes. If a static image is left on for extended time periods then it is possible for "burn in" to occur. If you have purchased a television in the last few years then most likely you will have no problem because the LCD, LED, and DLP HDTV's use a different technology.
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No. Video games will give you a headache and may ruin your eyes if played for many hours.
Some disadvantages of video games are that they kinda ruin eyesight (when I play Transformers:War for Cybertron, this happens).This happens because eyes were not made for great graphics.
by telivision and video.
Plasma and HDTV are not comparable since Plasma is a type of screen and HDTV is a type of video. Meaning that a Plasma TV can run HDTV on it, so there is no need to compare the two.
they want to make it more fun or dont want to ruin the movie
Most Consoles can scale up. PlayStation and pretty much all Xbox games support 480p. The Xbox360 also scales up to 720p and 1080i. You need to connect via the component video outlet. S-video and Composite are not compatible.
HDTV
A flip video phone is typically lower in quality than the hdtv camcorder would be. The flip video phone camera would generally be lower than 1 megapixel while hdtv camcorders would often exceed 2 megapixels.
Playing a video game with a console connected to the TV, such that the game appears on the screen, cannot damage the TV. Playing video games while actually sitting on your TV could indeed ruin it, as TVs are not intended to be used as seating. If you suspect someone has been sitting on your TV while playing games, you might want to ask them to stop doing that.
They're not - it's only the initial video presentation and video cuts that are 720p. The games themselves run at 1080p.Some HDTV's (like my own Aquos) will show you the resolution change between the game and the video clips as the game switches back and forth.
Most modern video game systems work in conjunction with an HDTV. HD graphics are a staple of these systems, so it's no wonder that the connection they use is HDMI.