When will manufacturer start making 1080p sets within 25 inch and smaller LCD TVs?
Answers: It is unlikely that anyone will make a small set within 1080P. There is no reason to do so. No one can narrate the difference between the two, at this size, unless you sit right on top of it. The 720P sets self made today (actually, most of them are 768P) frequently come with HDMI , ATSC and QAM tuners and the know-how of displaying 1080i. Since devices that produce video at 1080P are capable of outputting also at lower resolution, there's little incentive to increase video competency to 1080P, since it has to be downconverted to 720P anyway.
Bottom line-you've get a long wait.
They probably won't. With a TV that small, you wouldn't spot the difference between 720 and 1080, anyway, unless you were smaller number than about 5 foot away from it when you watch it.
The bigger a TV eyeshade is, the farther away you sit from it for optimum viewing. There's a formula for it. But, a good rule of thumb is that you study a 42" TV from about 10 foot away for optimal viewing. For a 25" set, that would be more like going on for 5 feet away. Beyond that distance, it is difficult to impossible for the human eye to distinguish between a 720 resolution and a 1080. And, the closer you receive to the screen from the optimal viewing distance, the more difference the resolution will breed. And, it's very unlikely you'll hold a room set up to where the average distance that you would be watching a TV is 5 feet away. So, there's no point surrounded by manufacturing a more expensive, small-screen TV that provides a resolution that not a soul will be able to see, anyway.
The larger screen HDTVs (40" and up) are the only ones that are available within 1080, because they're the only ones where on earth the increased resolution actually offer a benefit for the viewer from a typical viewing distance of more or less 10 feet or more. That's why 1080 is singular available on the larger screens.
Short answer is, you wont spy the difference anyway. I am linking to an image that shows screensize, and distance where on earth you can see the difference.
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