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#1042 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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#1043 | |
Active Member
Oct 2019
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There are a handful of videos on Youtube that say "8K HDR" but they are only HDR at 4K resolution. At 8K they are SDR. It seems like 8K with HDR is not allowed on Youtube yet. There are 3 HEVC 8K videos included on the TV's internal storage including one in HDR and they play fine. When I try to play either 8K VP9 or 8K AVC files on the TV's internal player it gives an error message. Interestingly when I try 8K HEVC it shows the spinning ball like it is trying to play it but it never does. I assume the decoder box will change things and I guess they made a special exception to play the internal HEVC videos right now. |
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#1044 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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8K TV War Intensifies but Consumers Still Prefer 4K - KoreaBizWire 10/24
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#1045 |
Active Member
Oct 2019
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Consumers have no reason to adopt 8K on their own. It will just be forced on them at some point.
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#1047 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#1048 |
Active Member
Oct 2019
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4K had the advantage of applying to both new and existing content so there was plenty of content available. 8K only applies to new content (and a few existing large format films).
Netflix lead the charge with original 4K content and I would hope they do the same with 8K. The infrastructure for shooting in 8K is mostly in place. We need the bandwidth now. Supposedly the average internet speed in the US is now approaching 100Mbps so that is a good start. |
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#1049 | |
Banned
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You don't even have the bandwidth for 4k... now you want 8k?? Besides, 8k isn't really worth it unless you have a GIANT screen in your home. 4k with true Rec 2020 and 12 bit and HDR that is standardized would be good enough. Plus, there's still the little issue of data caps, overage fees, network congestion, and the lack of net neutrality rules now. The internet is not going well. |
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#1050 | ||
Active Member
Oct 2019
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But the hardware makers are pushing it on consumers because obviously they want to sell new TVs. I'm just interested to see if/when the content makers follow. |
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#1051 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() The problem is that people that tend to get higher speed agreements with their provider run that test often I guess for ego satisfaction, where as someone that just wants basic internet runs considerable slower and doesn't use speed test ever. There is also no removal of duplicate results from the same IP address devices I bet. So it just a broad averaging of people running their speed test and thats what they publish. So given that there is so many rural customers, makes you really question this automatic averaging as reality. ![]() However nothing about that says the VoD infrastructure is capable of running that big a increase of packet load on server farms as tens of thousands of VoD 8k streams are initiated, if they would ever come up with standards. Sorry YouTube (VL9) is not a standard any serious VoD is using. The mobile test for recent 2019 are listed here. That IMHO is a quagmire of various telecoms with limited data limits. 5G is not going to fix that. Average is 33.88 Mbps down and 9.75 Mbps UP. |
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#1052 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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#1053 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Sheesh, at the rate you guys here are going with the belittling of 8K, Robert Z. won’t be able to afford to retire until he’s 80 years old. No O.C. fun in the sun for you Robert for quite awhile.
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#1054 |
Power Member
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I’m jumping in for the 82” Q900R, next week, I can’t wait to get this baby in home. My gaming needs will finally be met.
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (10-26-2019) |
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#1055 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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If you plug Monstro 8K and/or Helium 8K in search on the imdb website you can’t find anything worthwhile? Well then, in terms of prosumer quality, by Christmas Sharp plans to offer an ~ $4000 8K camera for your personal home movies (compressed to HEVC).
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#1056 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#1057 |
Active Member
Oct 2019
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#1058 |
Banned
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#1060 | |
Active Member
Oct 2019
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No one is asking for 8K just like no one asked for 4K or HD before that. At one time VHS was considered "good enough". Today you have to go out of your way to find a 1080p TV. It won't be long before all TVs over 65" will be 8K no matter what. And when you have the install base someone will want to sell them the content. |
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Thanks given by: | Staying Salty (10-26-2019) |
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