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#1581 |
Retailer Insider
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Joe Kane is a friend and I have the greatest respect for him personally and professionally. However, nothing about 4K SDR from 2013 relates to today's 4K HDR image.
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#1582 | |
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2011
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#1583 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#1584 | |
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2011
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![]() Today, we see most 4K displays with not just higher resolution, but HDR 10, HDR10+, Dolby Vision, etc., so he was exactly right. Its extremely hard to tell the difference between 4K and 2K, taking into account screen size and seating distance. HDR and Wider Color Gamuts are making the greatest difference between 2K and 4K displays because 2K displays don't come with those technologies incorporated in them. |
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#1586 | |
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2011
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#1587 |
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2011
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Dr. Raymond Soneira - Founder, President and CEO of DisplayMate Technologies Corporation
"The developer of DisplayMate is an internationally recognized research scientist with a distinguished career that spans physics, computer science, and television system design. Dr. Soneira obtained his Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics from Princeton University, spent 5 years as a Long-Term Member of the world famous Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, another 5 years as a Principal Investigator in the Computer Systems Research Laboratory at AT&T Bell Laboratories, and has designed, tested, and installed color television broadcast equipment for the CBS Television Network Engineering and Development Department. He has authored over 35 research articles in scientific journals in physics and computer science, including Scientific American. Dr. Soneira's background covers a wide spectrum of internationally recognized leading edge research in electronics, optics, applied mathematics, theoretical and experimental physics. For example: he has designed color television broadcast equipment for the CBS Television Network, built a computer mathematical model of a television system for optimizing the camera to receiver performance and accuracy of the optics and electronics for CBS, a leader of a team at Bell Labs Research that built intelligent autonomous mobile robots, designed an all-electronic 360 degree viewing angle imaging laser range finder using the parallax principle, did the mathematical foundation of the fine guidance system for the Hubble Space Telescope, built the accepted standard model of the Milky Way Galaxy (which is named after him), built theoretical high redshift cosmological and stellar models for the Hubble Space Telescope, has done fundamental work on the analysis of clustering and super-clustering of galaxies, plus work in Relativity and nuclear physics." Again, let me post another expert opinion, however before doing so, I wanted to post his background or resume. JohnAV, I guess he's a clueless idiot too that doesn't know what he's talking about. Maybe he filed bankruptcy, or his wife divorced him and took half, which mean he's doesn't know anything display technology or display resolution. Here's his quote: "When it comes to televisions touting new 4K technology, "a regular human isn't going to see a difference," said Raymond Soneira, head of display-testing firm DisplayMate Technologies." Now you can extrapolate that to 8K as well. |
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#1588 |
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2011
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Now please tell me, why I need to go to Best Buy to see for myself and listen to some kid at Best Buy telling me different?
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#1589 | ||
Retailer Insider
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However, I still dispute your analogy of 4K resolution and or 8K resolution and the benefits of higher resolution at viewing distances further than what the eye charts would lead you to think. Please read some of the links I listed earlier to get an understanding of how and why 8K benefits owners with viewing further back then how we measure the human viewing system. Joe Kane would also agree with all of my posts and with those I also posted from one of the world leaders in video science, Florian Friedrich. |
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#1590 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Please don’t play the victim, it is what it is, you were making these constant generalizations without citing any evidence.
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![]() Look, for years with rare exceptions (like that Sony white paper that Blu-rayNut enjoys referencing, but fails to acknowledge the caveats - footnote #3 – “Stars visible to the naked eye represent powerful contrast against the night sky and can be smaller than one arcminute in diameter. Humans are also an order of magnitude more sensitive to misalignment (vernier acuity.”) video engineers have simply extrapolated Snellen vision into their screen to eye distance assertions without accounting for Vernier acuity - https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...1#post15637076 If you’d been open-minded and more studious you would have seen that just of couple days ago I hyperlinked an old post from 2013 with research corroborating the validity of Vernier acuity - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3293147/ and if you do a search on PuBMed there a several more with grants from independent organizations like the National Eye Institute. But this obsession as to whose right or wrong with regards to visual acuity and displays’ resolution strays from the main point which is - https://www.displaydaily.com/article...an-just-pixels And Robert Zohn has gone on record essentially verifying the superiority of 8K tvs over 4K tvs at normal viewing distances in his showroom set up. Anyone, with or without advanced vision training is free to visit his showroom and dispute his assertions. Essentially, he’s put his reputation on the line. Last edited by Penton-Man; 01-20-2020 at 08:39 PM. Reason: typo and added an emoji |
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Thanks given by: | Gillietalls (01-27-2020), jibucha (01-21-2020), peterv (01-28-2020), ray0414 (01-22-2020), Robert Zohn (01-21-2020) |
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#1591 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I don't read many of the threads outside a couple in this tech forum, but I think that has since been disproven by the experiences of many 4K tv owners.
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#1592 | ||||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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And non-technical, studio-related matters - and there have been several other examples of him getting it wrong on other things as posted by a host of other members like Wendell Quote:
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#1593 |
Power Member
![]() Aug 2007
North Potomac, MD
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As Robert stated except for pixel density the benefits of enhanced 8K picture quality could be put into 4K TVs (at a higher cost). Because the 4K market is saturated I assume TV manufacturers don't feel they can recover the costs of putting the technology into 4K sets. Is the cost of replacing a good quality 4K set with an 8K for a slightly better picture worth it? TV manufactures hope so but for most people it would not.
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#1594 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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so, you see (no pun intended) understanding the nuances of human visual acuity/perception related to display technology is, for me, rather rudimentary in comparison. |
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (01-21-2020) |
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#1595 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Skyworth’s Upcoming 75″ Q91 8K Display Is A Feast For The Eyes - WCCFTech
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#1598 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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This may be something you want to try, you have a OLED 4K TV you really should be able to distinguish between 720/1080/2160 SDR and HDR. I can truly tell on my Sony 4K OLED between the resolutions. I also dont know specifically if the reason 4K looks so good on my OLED is due to the fact I invested in a high end 4K player or not. I do get what your saying about 8K and until the content is released in true 8K we may never see the difference it may be nothing more then a stupid marketing scheme. Sadly as you and others have said before people like big numbers. so naturally whats the next big number after 4k well its 8k then 16 then 32 etc etc. |
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#1599 |
Blu-ray Knight
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There has been all that much news except the usual penning of now is not the best time to buy a 8k TV, but they all seem to throw in the chart argument. Some of the parties seem to be ignorant as heck. Rational types use lack of 8k content, however this is a extra bad example.
The world doesn’t need 8K TV—yet - Quartz This one is basing this on a chart trying define the optimum distance so close it’s laughable. Yes for 8k this claims you need to sit within 2 feet of 8k to count the pixels rather look at is there any perception of image improvement, a 4K 65” a paltry 4.5 feet to count the pixels. Now that we have a lot of 4K displays owners, how many of us spend time only counting pixels instead of enjoying 4K media? In a similar manner how many need to look at printed images using a magnifying glass? ![]() ![]() |
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#1600 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Philips has an 88-inch 8K OLED TV – but you can't buy it yet - Tech Radar
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