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#401 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Perhaps poor choice of words on my part. Let me try to alleviate the confusion. I think that Robert’s local past and present “common man and woman” clientele are more sophisticated enough in determining picture quality than the sector of the population to which you are referring. And motivated at that, given some of them have travelled from the comfort of their homes to attend extensively long shootouts in the past in order to become well informed as to the nuances of TVs.
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#402 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#403 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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First of all I respect the success of anyone who is “well-heeled” if they’re self-made. Secondly, of what I’ve listened to during the past shootouts, I’ve found Robert’s local clientele’s questions in the Q&A periods after the formal presentations to invalidate your feelings. Even given their deep pockets, furthermore I also get the feeling that they are not the type who upgrade for marginal differences in quality, they're WAY too busy with other things in life. So, they fit the profile for being a more discerning consumer than the several people you are aware of on AVF.
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#404 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I do realise that people with loadsmoney literally have better things to do than have even a passing interest in the nuts and bolts of all this, unless they were actually involved with this industry at whatever point of coursh. They're too busy being successful to care and yay them, but I still wouldn't trust their opinion on whatever TV.
Maybe rich Americans are different than rich Britishers, I don't know, but in the decade+ that I sold TVs the amount of A/V knowledge that someone lacked was directly proportionate to the size of their wad. I mean, even the "common" person has better things to do than nerd up, but there was a special kind of "I don't care what it is, just give me the latest and most expensive one" attitude to the affluent ones. One Boxing Day I sold a TV that cost five grand to some fella who wandered in first thing after we opened, that set us up pretty well that day! |
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#405 |
Retailer Insider
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Our customer base is made up of two categories of buyers who buy the premium TVs and audio equipment. We sell Nationwide to audio/video enthusiast and locally in our wealthy community who enjoy buying luxury items to get the best entrainment in their homes.
At our annual TV Shootout Evaluation event we ask the 70+ attendees to vote and we publish their ballot totals, but for our awarding the "King of TV" we use the votes of "Panel of Experts" who are industry professionals made up of Hollywood colorists, Hollywood film finishers, video scientists and a few professional TV reviewers. The attendees are all very serious video enthusiast and they sit through the 6+ hours of this very technical presentation event enjoying every moment. Our presenters have been the most highly respected video experts available. Joe Kane and Joel Silver are frequent presenters and with them we have many of the top professional calibrators presenting. Every premium TV manufacturer sends their top engineers and senior product management to our TV Shootout. |
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Thanks given by: | DDH (02-17-2021), evoll (02-18-2021), gkolb (02-18-2021), Jay Mammoth (02-18-2021), Lee A Stewart (02-17-2021), Staying Salty (02-17-2021), wxman2003 (02-17-2021) |
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#406 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Otherwise, this whole 8K vs. 4K TV thing which is present on more than one thread here and likely on other gadget forums, results in endless debate fodder. Also, the other thing is that ‘expert’ scoring is a double-edge sword, for if it takes recruited ‘experts’ to tell a typical AV forum consumer, be it here, AVF or AVS which TV is better or not, then the improvement really can’t be that dramatic, can it? I think many serious, but cost-conscious consumers, aren’t interested in decimal point differences between an 80 inch 8K vs 4K TV but rather something more on the order of - if the 8K jobs knock your socks off, or at least knock them down to our forefoots. |
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Thanks given by: | DDH (02-18-2021) |
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#407 |
Blu-ray Baron
Jan 2019
Albuquerque, NM
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4K brought "better pixels" rather than just "more pixels." So what does 8K bring? More pixels.
Have people changed their living room so they can take advantage of the resolution increase 4K has over HD? No - I am not talking about the videophiles that populate this and other sites. I am talking about the millions of "regular" people. Their old HDTV TV was 9 feet from the couch. Wanna bet the new 4K TV is hanging in the same place? I don't know if 8K TVs without 8K content is "stupid." But personally I would have a hard time justifying one until the industry embraces 8K content like it has 4K content. Which frankly isn't much. HD is still the dominant format for home video. |
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Thanks given by: | DDH (02-18-2021) |
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#409 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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moonlighting here? -
c’mon Robert, herd a few experienced-in-TV-watching locals in for an impromptu 8K vs 4K side-by-side analysis and post it on the tube |
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#410 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (02-18-2021) |
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#411 | |
Senior Member
Aug 2020
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Today's Best OLED TV Technologies with Bob O'Brien of DSCC
Industry Insider discloses the best improvements to OLED TVs this year. Bob O'Brien explains why OLED TVs are better this year plus why he prefers MinLED TVs to OLED! Last edited by DDH; 02-18-2021 at 07:31 AM. |
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#412 | |
Senior Member
Aug 2020
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Showcase of the latest technologies (#microLED, leap #Oled, ...) at CES commented by Reiji Asakura
https://av.watch.impress.co.jp/docs/...a/1306500.html Quote:
Last edited by DDH; 02-18-2021 at 12:52 PM. |
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#413 | ||
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2011
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Watch what Joe Kane says here, please move to about the 3.25-minute mark of the video. Now Joe Kane, is respected and knowledgeable about display technology. He's not one of those Youtube influencers that many of you admire and think are experts. |
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Thanks given by: | jibucha (02-19-2021) |
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#414 | |
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2011
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#415 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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In the past Joe has made some pretty blatant errors with an s both on Home Theater Geeks interviews and during presentations at Value Electronics shootouts as well as in other communications which have been well documented in detail on this forum. I don’t have time to find and list them all again, but they’re there if one uses search word Joe.
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#416 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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It’s my understanding that proponents of *the most advanced televisions on or soon to enter the market* which are branded as ‘8K’ tvs, include processing that leverages the more pixels of 8K into better pixels during the upresing of non-8K sources. Ergo, let’s prove it or refute it with a test involving the 2021 models rather than posting conjecture. Let’s have an inaugural Value Electronics 8K vs 4K TV Case Study. Aren’t there a handful of New Yorkers here on this forum and AVS, who are not “well heeled” and within reasonable driving distance of Robert’s showroom who could serve as non-naïve participants in such a study….masked up of course, optimally, double masked. |
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#417 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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So if you took the same processing engine, same screen technology, same size, same viewing distance, and fed each one the same 4K content, the only difference being the resolution of the screens, I think 99.9% of people would not be able to tell the difference, and even then only on, say, 75" screens and above would the 0.01% be able to discern it. Alas, the playing field is not level as we know, with the manufacturers deciding to keep the even-specialer sauce for their 8K models so in that respect I think an 8K v 4K 'shootout' is worthless, no matter how eminent or well-travelled the audience might be. We can only compare what's available, true, and if it's not 'like for like' then that's just how it's got to be. But I don't pay attention to 'shootouts' in general as their results are guided just as much by the prevailing views of the cognoscenti in attendance than the actual day to day performance of these sets. |
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#418 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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In the proposed case study hosted by Value Electronics - - Will the top-of-the-line big TV of x resolution clearly outperform the same size of y resolution to a point where reasonably experienced local past attendees of Robert’s formal shootouts can tell the difference, in that it’s not incremental, but meaningful toward purchase. Not revolutionary in difference like SD -> HD but more on the order of ‘damn that is better’. During a slit lamp examination, general ophthalmologists (not specialized) don’t stare at one’s cornea or retina for minutes, but rather scan it quickly and get a very good impression as to what’s going on. Same for cornea or retina specialists. They’re even quicker. Not rocket science here or proving the science of resolution differences. We’re talking practical information as to the buying of a TV, this year. Serious potential buyers would want to know without all the theoretical overthinking you often see on AV forums by people who don’t or were never in the market to buy a TV anyway this year or spin control by salesmen/women. Simply, does A tv look better than B in Robert’s showroom by guys the likes of which post in these threads. I see Jay is from Buffalo so he’s too far away. Spare Change ?sp is too connected to Robert to serve as a participant but how ‘bout all of the local NYC guys who come out of the woodwork here and on AVS whenever Robert has an annual shootout? They could serve as participants and maybe given a small stipend to cover gas or train expenses for encouragement if they didn’t care to volunteer outright for the glory of it all. |
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#419 | |
Special Member
May 2017
Earth v1.1, awaiting v2.0
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![]() https://www.sony.com/electronics/tel...tions#features Seems that Sony is ladling a lot of that even-specialer sauce into this years A90J 4K display. ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (02-19-2021) |
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#420 |
Retailer Insider
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Correct, ^^ Sony pulled out all of the stops to make the new 2021 A90J Master Series OLED TV the very best it could be. Although I must also say the A80J OLED series and the flagship Z9J 8K are great TVs too.
Also happy to see Sony bring the new flagship XR video processor to the X95J, X90J LCD/LED series and the X1 processor for the X85J and X80J make these aggressively priced 4K HDR TVs very attractive to a wider audience. Sony listens and positively reacts to their key dealers and the consumers. |
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Thanks given by: | Scarriere (02-19-2021) |
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