What is variable aspect ratio?

The aspect ratio describes the relationship of screen width to screen height. Standard TV signals are based on an aspect ratio of 4:3 (four units wide by three units high). HDTV signals are based on an aspect ratio of 16:9, making the image 33 percent wider than a normal TV, and enabling you to view TV and movies as if you were watching them in a theater.

In addition, many DVD movies look better on the widescreen display, because most of the movies made in the last 50 years were filmed in an aspect ratio of either 1.85:1 (very close to 16:9, which is equal to 1.78:1) or 2.35:1 (even wider than 16:9).

Variable aspect ratio support enables the scaling of 4:3 and anamorphic video so that the image fills the screen.

What is HDMI?

High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) is the first industry-supported, uncompressed, all-digital audio/video interface. HDMI components can transmit both digital audio and digital video over a single cable, with improved quality over traditional analog connections because of an all-digital transmission. Transferring digital sources such as DVDs and HDTV programming, can now be accomplished without analog conversions that can degrade the original signal.

102HP MediaSmart HDTV User Guide