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#941 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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To play devil’s advocate, let’s say that figure is embellished due to the design of the study or even overt disingenuous influences. Perhaps it was closer to 5, 10 or say 15%. In your or anyone’s HDR analysis favoring Dolby Vision or HDR10 or vice versa (or HDR10+ as I don’t know what you guys are favoring these days), with these movie reviews is said increase in the picture quality you’re seeing with your preferred HDR format/TV tone mapping as much as 5, 10 or say 15% over the lesser option? If so, shouldn’t you also be interested in such a gain no matter what parameter is being introduced with newer technology. Until someone in a Robert Zohn-like shootout event disproves Park’s findings rather than the anecdotal one or two guys sitting in a room or standing at some show and then spouting off on some blog, I’m willing to give Park the benefit of the doubt regarding some sort of increase in image quality with higher pixel density. My question is truly how much and what will the TV cost me. |
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#942 |
Special Member
![]() Mar 2010
Portishead ♫
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Three years from now...8K OLED 75" Class...$3,000
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#943 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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But point taken, I've always been the sort of AV enthusiast (though I'm less about the A these days, hearing loss and all) who's chased after the extra 1 percent of performance if I can get it, yet here's the thing: HDR is my jam and it's damned sure given me more than 1 or "5, 10 or 15%" improvements in most cases. There's also a limit to chasing after those extra percentage points though, I'm NOT going to dump what is possibly the finest consumer LCD TV ever made and spend another three, four, five grand just for a "5, 10, or 15%" increase in one perceived area of quality which may well come with accordant compromises in other areas of quality e.g. the backlighting on the latest 8K Sony apparently doesn't even have the per-zone control of the ZD9, what the fudge is that about? And you couldn't pay me to take a Samsung TV no matter how many k's it's got, sorry but no. |
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Thanks given by: | DJR662 (09-25-2019) |
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#948 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I don't think you or anyone else need worry about any optical disc format beyond UHD. Not only is it unlikely that the niche film collector market will be be able to support another physical format, 99% of existing films will see little, if any, improvement beyond what 4K resolution and HDR can potentially provide. Material shot on anything beyond 35mm does technically have an organically higher resolution but whether or not the difference would be perceptible in motion is debatable.
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Thanks given by: | DJR662 (09-25-2019), Geoff D (09-25-2019), gooseygander2001 (09-25-2019), MechaGodzilla (09-25-2019) |
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#949 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#950 | |
Senior Member
Nov 2017
Nott'm, UK
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Personally I'd quite like to have a multi-channel amplifier that does not perform any video processing and that can be hidden from sight ![]() |
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#951 | |
Expert Member
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#952 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I would think 8k would mainly be offered on very large screens, such as the 88" LG described below, to offer upscaling and increase the pixel density. The lack of 8k material is moot.
https://www.lg.com/us/tvs/lg-OLED88Z...ure-oled-8k-tv |
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Thanks given by: | LordoftheRings (09-25-2019), Robert Zohn (09-25-2019) |
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#953 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Gears 5 at 8K demolishes $2,499 Nvidia Titan RTX graphics card - TechRadar
Gaming at 8k is a long way off Quote:
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#956 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (09-25-2019) |
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#958 |
Retailer Insider
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@JohnAV, correct, technically LG's 88" 8k OLED is not wall mountable, but it can be done.
We may not wall mount our first store shipment as after filling all of orders through the end of August we still have a wait list so after our calibration and review we'll likely deliver it to one of our waiting clients. |
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#959 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Well that’s good to know, I wouldn’t want to lose a fellow utility pole aficionado as a friend.
Believe me, I understand your affinity to HDR (https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...ar#post9754213). Hopefully, after being introduced into grading suites, eventually a home version of the Gargantuan - https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...d#post16674000 will become available when years from now, you’re feeling your Z9D has become long in the tooth. As I think you’ll agree on this that one can’t have too much luminance display capability, at least to show highlights – ![]() |
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#960 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Thanks given by: | LordoftheRings (09-26-2019), Robert Zohn (09-26-2019) |
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