Ho trovato questo articolo che potrebbe aiutare a far luce su qualcosa. Da quanto leggo imho credo che per il VT60 sia quasi impossibile riprodurre la cadenza filmica a 24p a meno che il flusso originario non lo sia di per se. Cosa, come leggerete dopo, ancora incerta.
NDR: quando cita Panasonic l'articolo fa riferimento al BR Reader.
"Netflix picture quality is outstanding. The picture is sharp and colors are vivid but balanced. The Panasonic’s other distinguishing feature is that it can play back streaming content at 24 frames per second (fps). For the most part, movies are filmed at 24 fps, but historically TV broadcasts are at 30 fps. So, there’s all sorts of tricks that are played to map a movie’s 24 frames into TV’s 30. This conversion only causes problems during actions scenes or camera pans and creates an effect called “judder” (a jerkiness to the picture). By playing a movie back at its original frame rate of 24 fps, those artifacts are eliminated. Netflix has content encoded at 24 fps. Unlike most Blu-ray players, most streaming-only devices only output 30 fps (doubled to 60 for you geeks out there). While Panasonic can play back streaming material at its native frame rate, it’s a manual setting. The unit does not automatically set itself to the proper frame rate as it does with Blu-ray discs. Up to this point, other devices could be forced into a 24 fps mode but the setting was inconveniently placed in the device’s set up menu. Panasonic has improved on this feature by letting you control the setting from within Netflix itself. To access the feature from within Netflix on the Panasonic, press “Option” on the remote, then chose “24fps” and set to “On”.
As nice as this feature is, here’s the rub: There’s no easy way to tell if Netflix content is encoded at 24 fps or 30 fps before you start a title. In theory, movies should all be at 24 fps and TV shows at 30 fps. In reality, that’s not the case. Some TV shows were shot on film and are encoded at 24 fps. Some examples include Battlestar Galactica and Sons of Anarchy. My sources tell me that consumer electronics manufacturers should be able to implement a feature that auto-senses the frame rate and be able to output 24 fps when appropriate. (in theory the Boxee can do it but it doesn’t support 1080P in Netflix). If you do set the frame rate to 24 fps and the material was encoded at 30 fps, you’ll realize it very quickly! So, there’s still an opportunity for a company to come out with a Netflix device that automatically detects and outputs the proper frame rate of streaming content."
La conclusione è: può il VT60 eseguire una funzionalità in modo analogo se non migliore di un BR Reader ? A posteriori può essere implementata la funzione che fa l'autodetect del flusso a 24p - se trasmesso -? Per me no..