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Originally Posted by steve1971
Well that's what "everyone" say's in the begining yes but I'm not just one of those "other's" who are so impressed with 4K that I find it better then 1080p and I dont. So while everyone is jumping on the hype ship that is 4K I'll be more then happy to stay with my Sony 1080p Sony 55W900A until it dies. After that happen's then its onto another tv and I'm sure it will be 4K BUT more then likely for me it will be a full blown projection system in 4K. But who knows if 4K will even be around when that day comes? But for now and for the forseeable future I aint budging one bit. 
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Part of the problem is that the UHDTV spec is slowly rolling out in the industry. (The spec if finalized, but industry initially only implemented part of the spec, e.g., the pixel count, and will over the next couple of years finally implement the full spec for the entire home video chain.) The full, best variant of 2160p will have a vastly increased dynamic range in brightness and color space and a higher frame rate. Once imagery is recorded (sourced) at those specs and delivered to your TV at those specs then you'll easily be able to see a difference between 1080p HDTV and 2160p UHDTV. If you can't, you'll likely need to get your vision checked.