India uses the PAL color standard, in line with the UK and most of Europe. NTSC is an incompatible color encoding system used across North America. As well as color encoding differences, NTSC televisions normally operate ar 60Hz while PAL models are designed to run at 50Hz field rate. Many modern televisions will handle both PAL and NTSC but the tuners are still likely to be different. It is best to assume that a North American television will not work in India. Standards converters can be used to convert a PAL signal to NTSC but they tend to be either poor quality or very expensive. Normally, it will be far cheaper to obtain a PAL TV intended to be used in India than try to convert signals. Even with converters, the tuner is still unlikely to work properly.
Yes, it will as long as your TV is NTSC compatible. If it is not, there is and NTSC-PAL adapter available which will allow this to work on older TV which are not compatible with NTSC
No, an NTSC telelvision will not display PAL signals properly. However, many modern telelvisions are multi standard and will show either PAL or NTSC signals. In these cases, using a PAL DVD output, for example, will work but note that there are potential problems with broadcast signals. Far fewer telelvisions have tuners built in that will work in multiple countries, so even if you have a multi-standard telelvision, you also need to confirm that you have a tuner capable of receiving broadcast signals from other countries, if you are planning on watching broadcast television.
TV tuners are not good for laptops. TV tuners were not built to be used on laptops and could potentially harm the device.
This product does not have a tv tuner. The All-in-Wonder series of cards from ATI do come with TV tuners, however.
national television standard committee
France use PAL format video, you would not be able to play NTSC video on a PAL TV. Bring a NTSC monitor with you as long it can handle France's 220v 50Hz power
If your flat-panel TV has an analog tuner (which are being phased out), it CAN show static, but modern processing in tuners usually switches the picture to a blue or black screen when the signal to noise ratio of the received station gets too low.
No, it doesn't. If a TV does have a Digital Tuner then it will say so in the menu.
if you live in the United States, go NTSC. for Europe and most of the rest of the world, PAL. It will most likely not work with your television with the wrong version. Do a wikipedia search for PAL and NTSC. Therein the answer lies.
ATSC Standards document a digital television format intended to replace (in the United States) the analog NTSC television system (NTSC is used mostly in North America and Japan). It was developed by the Advanced Television Systems Committee. NTSC is the analog television system in use in the United States, Canada, Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, Mexico, and some other countries, mostly in the Americas (see map). It is named for the National Television System Committee[1], the U.S. standardization body that adopted it.
For a SD NTSC Analog TV - yes you do.