I gotta be careful here. I think that the wobulating sets have been out there long enough to win the hearts of a lot of consumers. But the question, at least to me, is whether resolution created by wobulation is as "sharp" as resolution that derives from the full complement of rated pixels. Although the eye certainly can't see the alternating, or wobulating, illumination of the pixel arrays, wobulation may not be able to resolve all of the detail available, possibly because of the nonstandard diamond-shaped pixels, making the picture a little soft, notwithstanding the amelioration of SDE for some people. We may not have enough experience with, say, 1080p in various contexts to fully appreciate the ability of this technology to show it. So far as nonwobulating 1080p DLP chips are concerned, I heard a while back that TI had one, but if so, I guess it's not out yet. I've also heard a rumor that NuVision has a prototype nonwobulating DLP set, but I can't substantiate it. However, since wobulation was the imaginative response to limitations in the number of mirrors squeezable onto a DLP chip, as well as a cost-cutting strategy, it doesn't seem far-fetched that nonwobulating 1080p would appear eventually on DLP RPTVs.