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Best 4K Blu-ray Deals
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#801 |
Special Member
![]() Mar 2010
Portishead ♫
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And 8K will create even further reductions on the best 4K OLED TVs and 4K front projectors.
It's win win free fall for all. |
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#802 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Per LG press release
DENVER, Sept. 11, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- LG Electronics USA announced pricing and immediate availability of the world's first 8K OLED TV and the LG 8K NanoCell TV, which will be on display beginning tomorrow at the CEDIA EXPO 2019. The 88-inch class LG SIGNATURE 8K OLED (model OLED88Z9)1 and 75-inch class LG 8K NanoCell (model 75SM9970)1, with suggested prices of $29,999 and $4,999 respectively, are available at select LG-authorized retailers starting today. |
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (09-11-2019), Vilya (09-11-2019) |
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#803 |
Retailer Insider
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LG selected us as one of the launch partners for both 8K series TVs.
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Thanks given by: |
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#804 |
Special Member
![]() Mar 2010
Portishead ♫
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They couldn't have selected a better guy.
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (09-11-2019) |
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#806 | |
Blu-ray Baron
Jan 2019
Albuquerque, NM
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Will 8K TV Follow 4K's Quick Adoption Pattern?
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Thanks given by: | LordoftheRings (09-12-2019) |
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#807 | ||
Special Member
May 2017
Earth v1.1, awaiting v2.0
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Thanks given by: | Trekkie313 (09-16-2019) |
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#808 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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Speaking of a joke how about this article
Samsung's 5G 8K TV promises to make Netflix streaming faster than ever - TechRadar They try to hype it as "8K bingeing without interruption" Quote:
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Ok reality exists, it really does, a extreme short range 5G connection is not going to facilitate 8K streaming, it doesn't make Netflix streaming faster then ever. Duh you have fixed streaming speeds for Netflix, doesn't matter if you got 50 Mbps versus 1Gbps. You won't be seeing any 8k binging either, because Netflix and Amazon Prime Video don't offer any. ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | sapiendut (09-12-2019) |
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#811 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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This is why Samsung is pumping out propaganda that they will be the biggest 8K TV provider never mind anyone else. Its why they raced out there selling a 55" 8K TV so they can abandon their 4k TV's ASAP so they can argue the future is with them, instead of being realists with 8K technology. The problem with selling this story, is that the consumer might be convinced that the 8K ecosystem is ready way before its time. Those 3% (IHF) of the marketplace compared to 8K association (Samsung) claiming 50% of the TV marketplace by 2023 for the consumer is very confusing. Beware Sharks are in the water tread carefully! ![]() |
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#812 | |
Special Member
![]() Mar 2010
Portishead ♫
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#813 | ||
Blu-ray Count
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The floodgates to streaming 8K content have been opened! ![]() |
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#814 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() From Franky Zapata who flew over the channel in 8K. They added some humor with the police. |
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Thanks given by: | LordoftheRings (09-13-2019), Staying Salty (09-13-2019) |
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#815 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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From the DVB Scene magazine https://www.dvb.org/resources/public...4.pdf#page=12:
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#816 |
Blu-ray Baron
Jan 2019
Albuquerque, NM
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The resolution gap
If you've bought a TV in recent years, there's a fair chance it was a 4K TV. By now, more than 50% of all units sold are 4K TVs, and their value share is even greater. It's almost remarkable HD still has such a relatively high share as HD TVs are becoming scarce on store shelves. Most brands have few if any models left in their range. Since 4K TVs first became available about 6 years ago, they have steadily nibbled away at HD TVs dominance – first at very large screen sizes, gradually working their way down to all but the smallest screen diameters. This relative success of 4K TVs in the market seems to prove that chicken-and-egg-situations of content and hardware supporting each other don't always preclude market development. TV makers have pushed this shift to higher resolutions as a way to combat price erosion which threatened to destroy already slim margins. So has the 4K TV revolution succeeded? That depends whom you ask. 4K TV for sure is here to stay for a while, and will only go away if displaced by 8K TV, or if consumers stop buying TV sets altogether (and switch to mobile displays instead). This is imaginable, but unlikely to happen in the foreseeable future. TV manufacturers will not abandon 4K to return to HD, like they did with 3D TV, reverting to 2D. So at what point should we expect all, or at least a majority of broadcasts, to be in 4K? Probably never. If you had been counting on it, consider that about 20 years after the first introduction of High Definition Television (HDTV), still a lot of broadcasting takes place in Standard Definition (SD). Is that a problem? A first-world problem for sure. It depends on how large your TV is, how big your viewing distance, how much you care about spatial resolution, how good your eyes are, how well your TV can upscale, how eager you are to watch the local news, and a whole lot of other factors. https://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.ph...&id=1568369924 |
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Thanks given by: | gkolb (09-13-2019) |
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#817 |
Blu-ray Baron
Jan 2019
Albuquerque, NM
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Hisense dual layer LCD TVs
Then there is Hisense's dual-layer LCD technology. While we were fairly impressed with the prototype that we saw at CES 2019 (same prototype was on display at IFA), the actual consumer product (U9E "ULED XD") is less impressive. Something appears to have changed on the path from prototype to product. Hisense exhibited a 75-inch 8K "ULED XD" TV based on the dual-layer LCD technology. While certainly very colorful, it exhibited visible blooming and flicker as well as heavy vertical banding (visible in the photos below). The monochrome layer behind the LCD panel appears to be limited to 1080p resolution and the display was seemingly not capable of resolving 8K resolution, with jagged edges and visible pixel patterns as you move closer. ![]() ![]() If you have been waiting for dual layer LCD technology to solve the limitations of LCD you should probably realign your expectations. Panasonic's 'MegaCon' prototype, based on the same technology, is in a different league than Hisense's product in terms of picture quality but it has other issues. https://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.ph...&id=1568361005 |
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Thanks given by: | gkolb (09-13-2019), Robert Zohn (09-14-2019) |
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#818 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Lee you forgot the graphic representation from your posted flatpanelHD article.
![]() That in itself is more useful then article text comments on how 4K has succeeded. 4K OTA just isn’t viable with wireless industry buying up all available frequency spectrum from a crooked FCC from broadcasters. That in itself is like the analogy of you only have so many acres of food production vs a out of control population. Eventually that resource is maxed out, look elsewhere. 8k will be supplied via extreme high speed internet, or Satellite. ![]() Last edited by JohnAV; 09-14-2019 at 08:11 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | gkolb (09-13-2019) |
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#819 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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Sony's Crystal cinema display supports 16K, but could cost millions - Engadget
"If you've got the cash and space, you'll be the envy of your neighborhood." Quote:
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#820 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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John, evidently Sony has tamed the power consumption that was reported earlier this year (maybe that was CES).
Maybe that’s why nits are capped at 1000, to meet consumer power savings requirements. Ps: at first I was gonna say why not go 4000 nits to meet some of the mastering containers used by certain studios, but then I changed my mind to the above. Last edited by gkolb; 09-14-2019 at 03:45 AM. |
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