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#2741 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#2742 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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As with the high def formats there were competing propositions which all took time to whittle down into one unified format (although there was still that ill-fated DIVX rental version), and MPEG-2 itself wasn't formalized until July 1995 according to wiki.
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Thanks given by: | PeterTHX (05-14-2015) |
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#2743 | |
Banned
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I was about to mention MPEG2 wasn't ready for prime time yet. They rolled it out with DirectTV and people complained about the artifacting. I remember some LaserDisc hardcore predicting DVDs would be unwatchable because of it (water, fog, anything busy, etc). People also wonder why BD wasn't sooner: MPEG4 AVC wasn't ready yet either...surprised everyone's forgotten about the MPEG2 and later VC-1 discs that were there at the beginning (I never thought the MPEG2 BDs were that bad). |
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (05-14-2015) |
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#2744 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Yep. The very first demo DVDs that I saw (I can still remember coming across a demo in a department store, I was like "holy shit guys, this is DVD!" to which my friends replied: "meh") had terrible artefacting.
And then, as now with UHD BD, there were supply problems with the larger capacity discs to begin with. Not so much in the US, but Europe had a chronic shortage of dual-layer lines which was leading to a lot of flipper discs with the movie split into two. Thankfully the format gained so much traction so quickly that the problem was soon rectified, however the problem with UHD BD is that it's going to be such a niche format that no-one wants to front the bill for the 100GB lines, but without said lines then it won't be able to reach the heights necessary to really make it such a huge step up over BD to begin with. Chicken and the egg etc etc. Single-layer HDR solutions should be okay but as Penton said, it will have grave implications for any dual-layer HDR systems. (Edit: those aren't the same layers as disc layers, in case anyone was wondering ![]() Last edited by Geoff D; 05-14-2015 at 11:58 AM. |
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#2745 |
Special Member
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I can't help but call bullshit on the 100Gb lines, the price jump between 66Gb and 100Gb is astronomical and makes next to no sense, BDXL lines should be able to replicate the 100Gb discs and for that matter hit 128Gb whilst at it.
![]() ![]() Disc capacity and production cost is a red line for me here there has to be someone that can see sense and has brought up the same issues I have with the BDA, it's BDXL that's throwing the spanner into the works. I know the Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc's have a faster read speed but still it's all a bit fishy. |
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#2746 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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You can call bullshit all you want but you're coming at this from completely the wrong angle. As people have already said, BDXL is a recording format, NOT a mass replication format. Those BDXL lines are designed to produce blank discs with the appropriate dyes for end-user recording, and not to replicate specific disc ISOs on pressed, finished media. And given how niche BDXL is, I highly doubt the lines have anything like the 100,000 units per day capacity that's mandated for the retail UHD Blu-ray lines. Apples and oranges.
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#2747 | |
Blu-ray King
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#2749 | |
Banned
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UHD Blu-ray has 66 GB and 100 GB discs. The 100 GB discs will allow for higher bitrates, longer movies, and more easily support HDR video content. |
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#2750 |
Blu-ray Prince
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It's no different than standard BD which has two disc sizes too; 25GB and 50GB.
Last edited by rdodolak; 05-14-2015 at 03:56 PM. |
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#2751 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#2754 |
Banned
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That's what I meant too. Each Extended Cut should get two discs (even on UHD Blu-ray) in order to get the best video quality possible.
More video data still needs more storage space and H.265 isn't quite as efficient as they say it is. |
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#2755 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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That's a shame but i understand what you mean
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#2758 |
Blu-ray Knight
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#2759 | |
Senior Member
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#2760 |
Blu-ray Prince
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The BDA even touted triple (75GB) and quad (100GB) layers for standard Blu-ray back in the day but due to issues with the complexity and yields it never came to fruition.
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Tags |
4k blu-ray, ultra hd blu-ray |
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