Generally, yes. HDTV and dolby digital are widely used, therefore the DVR capability is available.
Additional info for the United States - some cable companies (Comcast, Time Warner) now offer DVRs from Motorola and Scientific Atlanta that record and playback in HD with whatever audio is broadcast; usually for only about $5/mo for the equipment rental. Satellite companies also offer this service.
At this point all HD DVR boxes available in New Jersey record in HD and in Dolby Digital, as long as that is how the source is being broadcast from the cable company.
by telivision and video.
No it isn't dude
HDTV
YES! I'm taking media certification level 1 for Best Buy too :O)
If the set has HDMI connectors it will be a HDTV.
VCRs do not support HDTV. You will not be able to record HD. You will be able to record a converted HD signal but will lose the quality.
This TV has a built in digital tuner and is HDTV ready so you can view over the air HD programming.
Yes
All televisions sold after March 1, 2007 include a digital tuner (by law) so you are good if you have bought a TV since then. If your television is labeled as �Integrated Digital Tuner,� �Digital Tuner Built-In,� �Digital Receiver,� �Digital Tuner,� �DTV,� �ATSC,� or �HDTV� then it has a built in device that will be fine after Feb. 17, 2009. If your television set is labeled as a �Digital Monitor� or �HDTV Monitor,� or as �Digital Ready� or �HDTV Ready,� this does not mean it actually contains a digital tuner. All this means is this TV is capable of handling the converter box. Thus, you still will likely need a separate set-top box which contains a digital tuner in order to view over-the-air digital programming.
Most US tv stations have already switched to HDTV
XBox
xbox