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#2 | |
Banned
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#4 | |
Active Member
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Consumer displays must behave like calibrated monitors if the same picture quality is to be enjoyed by the audience. The closer a TV gets to calibrated professional monitor performance, the less distorted the image will be. Human vision is very adaptable and can be conditioned to accept low grade video images. as "good." Most video consumers are never taught this and go through their whole lives thinking they must settle for guessing what the right picture adjustments are. The result may seem pleasing but may be a distortion of the intended image. An objective reference must be used when adjusting video display controls, not subjective guesswork. One source for objective test signals to aid in picture adjustment is a good optical disc program, such as the Disney 'World Of Wonder,' 'Digital Video Essentials: HD Basics,' and/or the 'Spears & Munsil HD Benchmark.' Professional calibration services are also available from the ISF and THX organizations. An excellent publication that details the early history of the Imaging Science Foundation and improved education in consumer video is available here: http://shop.widescreenreview.com/pro...wnload%29.html . It is an out of print special edition from 'Widescreen Review' magazine, titled: 'Imaging Science Theatre 2000- The Essential Resource Guide For Optimizing Picture Quality.' This digital download costs $9.99 for a PDF file of over 300 pages. Best regards and beautiful pictures, Alan Brown, President CinemaQuest, Inc. A Lion AV Consultants affiliate "Advancing the art and science of electronic imaging" |
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#5 | |
Power Member
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#6 |
Member
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I guess we'll agree to disagree.
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#7 | |
Banned
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![]() ![]() Edit: Just like everyone here, you are free to do and spend your money on what you please, however don't patronise those who do the opposite to you by acting as if you are some how making the smart decisions, and implying the rest of us are not. Last edited by Cevolution; 12-24-2012 at 02:11 PM. |
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#9 |
Member
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Cevolution, just to make myself clear, I don't join forums to be the smart-alek troll. I joined here because I recently bought a blu-ray player, and my first blu-ray film and well, probably buy many more. I've finally reached a point where I can actually make use of the latest technology--took me six years because I didn't have the income. Why would I spend so much and then bash at it?
What I was trying to tell the OP is that everyone's situation is different. Not everyone has projectors in the ceilings and 7.1 surround systems, so in essence there are different setups that make sense based on your environment. From what I saw on my tv when I was setting it up, I said that it didn't sound like he did anything wrong, and that he's going to live with the system therefore he should be happy with his choices. I don't quite see how that supports a "blu-ray sucks" theory. |
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#10 |
Member
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Just to add, I'm not here to start garbage on Christmas. If I said the wrong things that make me seem hyper-critical of blu-ray, well, I'm sorry if it came off as that. I take lots of stuff and advice with a grain of salt, so a lot of "adjustments" and "paid for" stuff I'm typically skeptical about.
Last edited by Lutra; 12-25-2012 at 02:53 PM. |
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