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#8361 | ||||||
Blu-ray Samurai
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![]() I'm not missing much. There is not a lot of media available in any case, and what is around is not high-quality film in any case. I will wait. Quote:
HDR wasn't even being discussed when I got my 4K set. I bought too early, but it seems I didn't miss very much. I will get an HDR set, eventually, but it isn't a rush. There is a very good reason that I also have a Pioneer Kuro 151, so calibration means less than a quality set out of the box. Quote:
Yes, they do. Quote:
That's nice. I suppose it's really required if you don't know how to adjust your equipment yourself, or have a unit of lousy quality in the first place. Calibration is a fad that pre-supposes that the gear you paid good money for was crap when you bought it, and only someone else can make it tolerable. While it can improve the picture, there are a lot of factors that go into it. Quote:
Film itself is a series of compromises in lighting, type and brand of camera, aspect ratio stock, various visual effects, variables in the venue in which it is displayed, and photographic competence. The variables are just too great. But I am wondering how badly it is skewed for HDR... Quote:
Too much of the discussion of HDR is about being dazzled, and I take these comments with a grain of salt. Quote:
No worries. I'm from Compton, California myself, and though I have taught myself perfect Business English without a detectable accent, I still occasionally slip into colloquialisms that only natives can really understand. |
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#8362 |
Blu-ray Guru
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So far that intrusive DRM, has been a non starter there has been no online authentication, as for diminishing returns that one is still subjective, I have always argued that it's more about the WCG and HDR than resolution, even on a small screen it's noticeable, they could have very easily incorporated this into 1080p, and improved that experience, 4k itself only adds a modest improvement on the most popular screen sizes of 50" to 55".
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#8363 |
Active Member
Jul 2011
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I think the biggest hurdle is still based on the fact it's physical media which is going against the trend towards of internet streaming and Cable On Demand. Historically speaking the number 1 factor that lead to mass adoption for both audio and video has been form factor and convenience of that tech.
Compact Cassettes became huge because they were convenient and portable way of listening to music(Walkman came out in '79). CDs overtook cassettes primarily because they were more convenient(track skipping is such a huge benefit in music). iPods killed off CDs because of convenience despite have worse sound quality and streaming is killing off iPods because of convenience. Consumer audio music is at it's lowest quality since 20 years ago. Laserdisc primary failed because the form factor was way too big and DVDs solved that issue much like how CDs replaces Cassettes. The biggest hurdle going for UHD BD is that it's simply doesn't solve the convenience equation....it's still a disc. At best you can hope that UHD BD kind of limps in like BD did and slowly filly a niche for people who want physical media which I think it can and really thats what it has to do. It's just going to continue to get more difficult as time goes on especially as traditional movies lose ground to networks putting out shows that are top notch(Game of Thrones, Narcos..etc) and rental options for physical media dropping over the years. |
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#8364 |
Active Member
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Ill tell you what, Sense 8 via netflix running 30mbps looks stellar. Breaking Bad as well. If, as said, Breaking Bad was just an upgraded scan cuz it wasnt shot in 4K, ill take any full frame 4K/ upscaled movie vs watching one with OAR and black bars tyst dont allow me to see the upgrade on my 65'' LG 4K tv. The black bars essentially mitigate the 65'' set and pit this into play:
https://www.google.com/search?q=seat...eGx3MGdfvuM%3A I believe this is a good portion as to why the Avatar Blu-ray did so well at launch- selling a million copies- because people could see the entire picture on their tv- no black bars. Obviously the movie being a blockbuster was a bigger factor but the fact you can enjoy it on a smaller tv 55-60'' was an massive factor too. 4K Direct tv for sports will be a hit. Movies with the aspect ratios stated will be a smaller one. Maybe i dont have my couches close enough to my tv ( about 15' away) but i, nor most people, will cram their couches close to the tv and make their family room look like a joke just to enjoy 4K on the aspect ratios i continue to mention. Last edited by 4K fanatic; 05-15-2016 at 03:31 PM. Reason: iPad spelling errors |
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#8365 |
Active Member
Jan 2013
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Your argument makes absolutely zero sense. You're saying that the aspect ratio of a movie has an effect on quality? So, does that mean that you just kept buying full-frame DVDs and never made the jump to Blu-ray either?
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#8366 | |
Active Member
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Not saying I agree, but it was easy to see that is what the point was. And, this probably doesn't apply to a proper scope projector setup. I will agree that it can certainly change the "awe" factor. Avatar was particularly pleasing as a 1.85 movie, possibly because it filled the screen. Last edited by larrs; 03-28-2016 at 09:20 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | 4K fanatic (05-15-2016) |
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#8367 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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Thanks given by: | UFAlien (04-02-2016) |
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#8368 |
Active Member
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I agree and never said I didn't. The density of the pixels is the same. However, as I said, it was easy to see that was his argument (not mine).
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#8369 | ||
Active Member
Mar 2016
Nashville
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#8370 |
Guest
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Eh, since the average joe can access thousands of movies and TV shows with a tiny magic box through their cable provider, along with other just as easy on-demand options, it's hard to fathom any new rendition of physical media catching on.
Most consumers never really cared about quality alone. DVD was a big jump in PQ/AQ over VHS, but it offered many other benefits. BD and UHD are viewed more as "accessories" to DVD to the mainstream, still just "movies on CD" competing with the ease of clicking through a few menus on your TV to watch something. Then they look over at their stacks of discs and see a big waste of space and how many they only watched once or twice. Thinking how stupid it seems now that they have a box to do it all. That's unfortunately the growing perspective of the average consumer. So ultimately, UHD will serve a niche like LaserDisc, and that's just fine and not necessarily a bad thing. Last edited by damnation; 03-29-2016 at 02:37 PM. |
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#8371 |
Member
Mar 2016
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Been reading lots about this 4K. I'm not gonna get one. I want to experience a 4K UHD tv with a uhd 4k blu ray player and a 4k uhd movie. The thing is i'm afraid that it can flop because we are gonna get 8K at some point too. Gonna stick to the blu rays. Blu rays were the highlight of my generation as a teen in 2006. 1080P HD suits me well.
Would get really expensive too to buy a whole 4K set. Thou ofc if i'm really impressed and love it, i will buy it. Gonna be real pissed people who collect and buy lots of 4K stuff and then suddenly 2 years after 8K comes and blows the crap out of everyone's mind. Think im gonna stick with 1080P for now, but who knows maybe 4K and 8K will blow my mind. At least gonna wait for prices to drop. Read something dumb online the other day. Somewhere it read that 4K may irritate and damage your eyesight. Can't be right? Maybe if your face is glued to the screen :P |
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#8372 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Feb 2014
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And, even some established, older musical groups/artists come out with CD re-releases/boxed sets on a regular basis, i.e. The Beatles, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, etc. In fact, I don't think any of the Beatles catalog has ever been OOP for any long period of time - since they're always getting re-released. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-16-2016), Steedeel (04-13-2016) |
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#8373 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I think when people say one format has 'killed' another these days, they mean 'X format has killed X format in my house'.
In my house, CD (and vinyl) still rules the roost and bluray is winning the war against streaming by a healthy margin. Surprisingly VHS has outsold DVD this year. Your house might differ. |
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Thanks given by: | ilovenola2 (04-14-2016) |
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#8374 | |
Blu-ray King
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On the subject of films, I don't care if the whole world turns to smartphones and shitty SD streams, if I can't enjoy my entertainment on the big screen at some point in the far future, I think it would be my turn to get off the ride! ![]() |
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#8375 | |
Active Member
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#8378 |
Active Member
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Wish there was some way to update the classics to a 1.78:1 ratio with a 4K screen resolution. Watched Gilda via TCM on demand from Direct Tv. Don't think I've seen a more beautiful women than her in that or the cute girl next door look of Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's.
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#8379 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Apr 2010
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I will take physical over digital anyday. However, I do not see any physical media, 4K or otherwise filling people's homes again. Not until studios pull the plug on DVD. DVD killed VHS and unfortunately, due to its explosive popularity it is also preventing any future physical media from taking the baton. They should have killed DVD 5 years ago.
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#8380 | |
Active Member
Jan 2016
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Now is the perfect time to kill DVD. We've got Blu-ray as the baseline for the mainstream + it's now really cheap to produce the 50 GB Dual Layer Blu-ray discs and we've also got the new premium 4k Ultra HD Blu-ray for the enthusiasts. |
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Thanks given by: | MobileES (05-18-2016) |
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Tags |
4-k uhd, blu-ray, ds9, failure, frustrated, oar, star trek deep space nine |
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