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#1321 |
Power Member
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I was just looking at the screenshot comparisons from Battle:Los Angeles...Is it me...or does the regular blu-ray shots look clearer than the 4K blu-ray!!
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#1322 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Go here http://www.etconsult.com/papers/Imag...tt%20Cowan.pdf Read p.25 and then look at a couple of the sample images below that. When only a smidgen of sharpening is used, many viewers can’t identify that digital enhancement, as such and some viewers actually prefer it to ‘native’ imagery which can be comparatively *dull* in some scenes. As an analogous aside, a stereographer from a well known conversion company has performed tests given to both non-industry observers and industry professionals using native 3D vs. 2D -> 3D conversion samples and the vast majority of the audience members (in each category, ‘expert’ and ‘non-expert’) have chose the conversion samples as the preferred imagery. |
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#1323 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#1324 | |
Power Member
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#1325 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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“To summarize this is the first product I have seen that I would consider to replace my Pioneer 151FD which is something I thought might not happen for many years. This is not to say it is without flaws. The anti-glare coatings on this along with the off-axis viewing are much worse than my Pioneer. I am excitedly waiting for the day when the price of these products drop to the point that more consumers can enter the age of 4K.” - - from http://homecinemaguru.com/?p=3655 b.t.w., for new readers to the thread, in regards to the hidden test signals which Jeff refers to in his testimonial - “The hidden (7669) resolution pattern found on Sony Blu-Rays has also never looked better.” For some background on those, see – https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...ry#post7591928 |
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#1326 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() The only sure facts out right now is that the CE industry is moving forward with 4Kx2K which is talking 1080P content and upscaling it to 2160P/24 hz on new UDTV's. The 4K pass through in AVR's is only against this type of video. It seems to be a natural progression to what might be the next BD standard as film content is captured at 24 hz. ![]() Sure you have people clamoring for 2160P broadcasts (60hz) based on HDMI 2.0, but look at how antiquated the old analog Broadcasting standards are. NTSC dates back to 1941. Probably see H.265 compression used against so called 2160P/24hz video streams way before broadcasting gets its act together that seems stuck in the 720P /1080i era. ![]() Just my opinion but I don't see anything in the near future related to HDMI Specification v2.0. Even if they announced it tomorrow, things just seem to drag for a year or more before being incorporated into mainstream consumer electronics. ![]() One more tidbit, I'm not sure Hollywood is excited to see their native 4K content out where it can get pirated easily, probably one of the main reasons why HDMI 2.0 didn't happen yet. Last edited by JohnAV; 05-29-2013 at 12:11 AM. Reason: typo |
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#1327 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#1328 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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If you're interested, give it more time. For example, past history has shown....https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...ia#post6639117
Last edited by Penton-Man; 05-29-2013 at 12:13 AM. Reason: added a phrase |
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#1329 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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I say it goes 10,000 by Q3 2014 and 2,000 by 2020 |
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#1330 | |
Banned
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With all the talk of "just" 4K we're forgetting about what the UHD standard really means. |
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#1331 |
Senior Member
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In light of new emerging technologies and the BDA investigating adding these new technologies to the blu-ray spec, I was just wondering about the viability of bluray. It is my hope that the BDA will be able to accommodate new technologies such as 4K, HFR, new audio codecs (Dolby Atmos), and 4K 3D and be able to add it to the revised bluray spec.
How plausible is this? Lets say the BDA decides to use the new H.265 codec and BDXL discs - will the storage be enough to handle say 4K 3D in HFR (either 48fps or 60 fps) with Dolby Atmos encoding? Will the new HDMI 2.0 be able to handle this as well or is that yet another barrier? Or will we have to endure yet another format such as holographic discs? Another optical disc format will leave a bad taste in most peoples mouths and I don't think another format will survive given the fact that there will now be 3 physical formats competing. Any insights would be greatly appreciated. Lets hope the BDA does right and includes all of these technologies in the new spec to ensure the longevity of bluray as a disc format. |
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#1332 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Now getting back to getting 4k onto media. There is a already a 128 GB BDXL media with can be read by current BD players. If you add H.265 to the equation then you can achieve the equivalent of four times the data that a 4K movie represents over a 1080P blu ray soon enough. But if you start wanting double that for 4K 3D forget it. Looking at the more two dimensional 4k at 48 Hz, that was not well received as I recall (special showing of Hobbit at 4k), and was more of a professional experiment by Jackson to see if Hollywood liked it. IMHO I would think Dolby Atmos recording is way beyond what is usable in home theater. (Scales easily to any size theatre, with up to 64 independent speaker outputs) But I guess some people just want it all. ![]() |
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#1333 |
Senior Member
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The BDA can get to 8K later, there is no need to worry about 8K @ this point in time. There is enough to deal with now with 4K.
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#1334 | |
Senior Member
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#1335 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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But, the reality is, it will be quite some time before you see even one 4K HFR motion picture exhibited at your local commercial theater. |
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#1336 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Which reminded me of the rare cinematic practice outlined in this article in the New York Times…http://www-nc.nytimes.com/2013/04/14...nted=all&_r=6& Last edited by Penton-Man; 05-29-2013 at 06:09 PM. |
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#1337 | |
Blu-ray King
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#1338 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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You have no idea… http://advanced-television.com/2013/...ng-into-focus/
But think how Borussia Dortmund felt in the 89th minute of the match last weekend. |
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#1339 | |
Blu-ray King
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![]() I'm good to go, just need things sorting ![]() |
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#1340 |
Power Member
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All the speculation regarding HDMI 2.0 and what I can provided I have started to wonder, does it matter? We have had 1080p for years yet we still watch broadcast in 720p/1080i. Is there really going to be any content to take advantage of 2.0? The next generation of games systems will be 4k capable but will games be 4k? I don't think I ever played a native 1080p game on the PS3. I'm starting to think a lot of what it can provide is useless much like deep color and 32bit displays. Thoughts?
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