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#2821 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The Truth!
http://www.adequacy.org/stories/2001...12921.289.html is that fud has been around a long time. Ignore it. |
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#2822 | |
Senior Member
Nov 2008
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Let's not forget how much people said that HDTV would never take off. Look at it now. Last edited by FinalEvangelion; 02-22-2011 at 09:30 PM. |
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#2823 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#2824 |
Member
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No, but nnonetheless the horizontal resolution of DVD is 540 lines, which is more than the double resolution of the old VHS format!
If you don't believe me: simply look at http://hometheater.about.com/cs/tele...ideoresa_2.htm . The beauty of the horizontal line is, that t6his is a measured value. It is a simple count of the lines that you can recognize in the resulting picture. Concerning the compression: There was no luck involved in the use of the compression, but the compression algorithm was designed according to the optical capabilities of our eye and mind. In fact you obviously don't really understand how the compression really works. The 8x8 blocks has more to do that you use a stable wave function for the real compression, and that the calculation power of the encoders was rather limited. In fact there was a fundamental difference in the design of the DVD and the Blu-ray. When they designed the DVD, they were unsure if the format can really gain momentum. It was generally expected that the DVD would first win many computer customers due to the higher capacities. The movie standard itself was designed to be cheap. So the DVD was limited to restriction of 10 MHz processors, that were even cheap when the format was designed. When the Blu-ray was designed they were convinced, that they were deigning a new winner. So no technical restrictions were really observed instead politics played a major role. So we have several severe design flaws in the format itself. This is simply WRONG! Last edited by KarstenSch; 02-22-2011 at 10:46 PM. |
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#2825 | ||
Active Member
Aug 2008
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And I think your confusing whats meant by an 8x8 marcoblock, what a discrete pixel is, and what chroma subsampling is. Hell, just as a challenge I think I'll encode a static image of black & white lines in MPEG-2 and post it somewhere. Quote:
Actually you can throw out technical specs here. Just use your eyeballs. I remember when I first bought a DVD player noticing a startling PQ improvement, and that was on an interlaced 27" CRT. That said Bluray to DVD was also an obvious PQ improvement, even on my 42" 720p plasma. A quick screen comparison I found, many others out there: http://www.stompshow.com/DVD_vs_VHS.html Last edited by lobosrul; 02-22-2011 at 10:17 PM. |
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#2826 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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2) the 540 is wrong for DVD, simple as that and based on two false assumptions a) that every DVD is 720x480 full frame and I know many are wide screen (i.e. 720/4*3=540 so a square is 540x480 but on a wide screen it would be 720/16*9= 405) b) that you can reference each and every pixel in DVD which is IMPOSSIBLE, in each frame there has to be some compression. It would need over 8Mb for that one frame, and even though the other frames won't need anywhere near as much (if we assume they are constant for several seconds) the 9.8 ceiling is too low (and in a movie some of that space will be taken up by audio). 3) even if one assumes DVD = VHS in vertical (which it is) and double in horizontal (which it is not) that still makes twice the amount of data between DVD and VHS while BD has 6x the data of DVD and that is before we add compression, once that is added then BD has an even bigger difference since it does not need to be as over compressed as DVD |
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Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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#2828 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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I agree that BD is a big improvement over even upconverted DVD but I also think it's pretty clear that in practice those improvements can often be pretty subtle. This whole sidebar got started by people suggesting that the jump from DVD to BD doesn't always have the same 'wow' factor that the jump from VHS to DVD did and I think that case can be reasonably made. I find dvds hard to watch now but I did not get there overnight and I consider myself a fairly discriminating viewer. |
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#2829 |
Power Member
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I guess we'll have to agree to disagree as the "wow factor" issue is subjective. To me DVD always looked more or less like VHS-on-a-disc, very dreary standard def stuff, yes somewhat clearer and with a mock (anamorphic) 16:9. I've always thought the move from analogue SD to digital SD was subtle, the jump from SD to HD enormous. I suspect people who don't see this may have the "will to believe" otherwise owing to a heavy personal investment in DVDs, bought rather inopportunely just as standard def was going obsolete. But more generally it is a fact that some people are insensible to the beauties of hi-def.
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#2830 |
New Member
Feb 2011
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#2831 |
Special Member
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#2832 |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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Yes if by wow one describes using them to play ultimate Frisbee, a disk is much better then a rectangular box to be used as a Frisbee and there is no improvement between BD and DVD. But the guy talked about picture quality, and comparing picture quality can be done objectively by comparing how far the three images are from the original. The issue is that if someone says DVD has WOW and BD does not then it is not about the quality of the picture. What happens is VHS was analogue and DVD is digital, DVD has a bit better picture (closer to the original film element), but what it also has is a lot of DNR and EE. DNR kills the fine detail which makes everything look smoother, but it also blurs the image then EE is added to make it look sharp. This artificial destruction and sharpening creates a -for lack of a better word- colour book effect that some ignorant people describe as looking better. Even though someone is allowed to like it better (wow) the PQ is deteriorated because it makes it more distant then the original. Now I am also not saying that BDs don't have DNR or EE or compression, but it does have 6x the resolution and because of the much higher BW and capacity DNR, EE and compression don't need to be applied as much and you can see more of the film grain and details that where in the original.
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#2833 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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When DVD came out it was a major improvement over VHS in so many ways. So many ways I could write a back about the improvements. Is Blu a major improvement over DVD? Watch a movie on dvd then on Blu ray. You would have to be blind not to see the major difference. Blu ray and HDTV is the best thing going today, period!
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#2834 | |||
Member
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This was no problem with a CRT, because CRT's were not really pixel based (there native pixel dimensions were much bigger than resolutions of the NTSC/PAL standards, in fact in many cases NTSC and PAL Displays contained the same CRT!). The 540 lines were MEASURED resolutions! How many lines can be displayed till it is no longer possible to differentiate the single lines. Quote:
The 9,9 Mbps only had the foundation that a lot of the manufacturers demanded that the standrad works with a 10 MHz processor, while the image pupils demanded a ceiling of 16 Mbps. The compromise was the burst mode that allows the transfer and buffering of critical framesin the remaining space of previous difference images. You can argue what you want, DVD was quite perfect for the real capabilities of the TVs of its time. The first Flat screens on the other hand had quite a lot of problems. One of its biggest: Their inferior color capabilities and suddenly the slight color differences between some pixels were gigantic. In fact even many of todays displays have problems to match the color distribution of our eyes or of old CRTs. Some of the differences between DVDs and Blu-rays is, that the mastering of Blu-rays was always targeted toward the strength and weaknesses of the Displays that are currently in use. Upscalers really have to do some wizardry to get more or less around these differences. Quote:
From a european perspective it is quite obvious that the jump from VHS to DVD was much bigger than the jump from DVD to BD. |
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#2835 |
Special Member
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There seems to be another thread with topics no different, so I'll just copy my reply on there to here as well,
If physical media for movies were to ever disappear, every Canadian will be screwed. We have some of the worst internet policies that I know of with the constant threat of low usage caps with very high overage fees. Right now, the government sided with the public. Canada is run by the corporations though in the end. A few full HD movies from Netflix would be very hard to do. That and our speeds are across the board low. The fastest speeds are rolled out in very, very small areas. So the majority of people on high speed here are running at a maximum 5-10mbs (which is no where near as advertised for many). If blu-ray as a physical media were to ever go, Im screwed. I'll add more to my reply though, digital media requires a whole new infrastructure of delivery. It's like having electric cars wanting to become the norm, though you need to have the power grid to support it. If digital media is the way of the future (not a chance that I want it to be, I prefer physical media 100%. I dont even download from Steam, I go to EB games still...), then the method of delivery will have to be that much efficient. Then you have all the major issues, up here in Canada the internet is controlled by companies who also provide Cable/Sat TV as well as their own streaming services. It's not easy, especially for us here, we have no real competition to open the market and drive the technology forward. The U.S. may be lucky, we are not. So as I said earlier, Id be screwed into the wall hard if they ever get rid of physical media before offering the infrastructure towards delivery. I think the industry recognizes this, so I dont see blu-ray going anywhere anytime soon, especially with the players dropping in price to 70.00 for generic brands. Movies can be had for less then 10.00 a piece. Blu-ray has never been more affordable and will be more so as the years go by. Last edited by Caesu; 02-24-2011 at 10:56 PM. |
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#2836 |
Active Member
Aug 2008
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Actually, all DVD's are anamorphic, in other words their pixels are not square. All NTSC DVD's are 720x480 (an AR of 1.5), and all PAL DVD's are 720x576 (an AR of 1.25). 4x3 NTSC DVD's, are stretched to 720x540 then scaled up, whereas PAL 4x3 DVD's are slightly stretched to 768x576 before being scaled up. Scaled up only on a monitor of greater resolution than DVD that is of course.
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#2838 |
Banned
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Blu Ray will live long and now with 3D blu ray it is only getting better for Blu Ray. There will always be people who want physical media over digital. digital is overrated and it would take very long time to download a HD movie of 45 GB which blu ray discs is now and what about the extra material studios is making. Not to mention you can't even download legal HD movies yet.
Last edited by mredman; 02-26-2011 at 12:36 PM. |
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#2839 | ||||||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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that is the issue with horizontal line measurements, they tend to under represent the true definition of an image. Quote:
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If this was true then why does a downscale BD to SD only on available BW look better then DVD? Quote:
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wow so from what I understand after all this back and forth is that the difference between formats should be evaluated by the "perfect set-up". Where perfect set-up= a person that is so blind that watching a TV that is too small from too far away that also downscales the BD image there is so little difference he can see that he can pretend DVD added more to the picture quality then BD did. Don't get me wrong 40" is not too small and 3m is not too far away, even if it is down converted to 720p anyone with relatively good eyesight (after glasses if needed) will see the big difference BD brings to the table. Now I get my mistake, when saying picture quality of the format the actual difference in quality of the picture on the format is irrelevant, we just use what the most insane test availablefor the desired outcome. Why even bother turning on the TV. |
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#2840 | ||
Active Member
Aug 2008
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Your second statement is false. BD does support 1440x1080 anamorphic (not sure any exist though). Not to mention it supports NTSC and PAL anamorphic resolutions (just like DVD), which are used for many supplemental features etc. Quote:
Last edited by lobosrul; 02-26-2011 at 02:47 PM. |
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Tags |
4-k uhd, blu-ray, ds9, failure, frustrated, oar, star trek deep space nine |
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