If they support an on-screen resolution of 1920x1200, they're 16x10. When displaying 16:9 content, they have small black bars at the top and bottom of the screen, which both MY HDTVs do.
I have no idea what you're talking about. Can you please show me a single LCD TV larger than the low mid 20" range that has a LCD panel that is 1920x1200? TVs have scalars in them. They often may accept 1920x1200, but they don't have 1920x1200 pixels on the screen. They simple squish it down, or your video card enables panning.
Some movies are 1.85.1, which is slightly wider than 16:9 (1.7777777), so they have very small bars along the top and bottom.
Sir, you are wrong. Admit your mistake.
I'm not wrong, so why would I admit it?
There's a reason it's called 1080p, not 1200p. I reviewed 103 1080p LCD TVs at Crutchfield from Samsung, Panasonic, Mitsubishi, Sony and Toshiba. Every single one of them has 1920x1080 pixels and is listed as 16:9.
Apparently you're suggesting that those 1920x1080 pixels on the TV are not square which gives the TV a 16:10 aspect ratio, and on top of that somehow the TV displays content with 1200 pixels vertically on the TV while maintaining a 1:1 pixel mapping despite the TV having only 1080 pixels. :rotfl:
Why don't you get out a tape measure and measure your TVs height and width? Please report back.