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#5561 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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You guys been busy. No way I can get up-to-speed on this thread right now but I’ll try to contribute at least a few quickie replies to posts on this page….while Ray is taking a breather for the next round.
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#5562 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5563 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Indeed, from April 8 - https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...ab#post7391680 but I see that previously supplied link in that old post is no longer functional, so here goes, I’ll try again –
http://hopa.memberclicks.net/assets/...rHPA_FINAL.pdf |
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#5564 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5565 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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The fact still remains that 4K requires a larger display and closer viewing distance than usual for the home to truly appreciate the 'subtle' differences. Look, I am all for tech improving but I am taking this so called major increase of quality claim with a grain of salt. As said earlier 1080p for the home is very close to cinema 2K which I agree on very large screens at the theaters is lacking. At home though 1080p/2K is more than adequate for even large home projection systems. The other thing that is getting overlooked is while the prices of the 4K sets drop is that that will also cause the prices of 1080p sets to drop. The current state of the economy and the general consumer dictates that most consumers will be drawn to cheaper 1080p sets. Again I am not entirely against 4K but I highly doubt it is going fix all the ills of the home video industry. Edge enhancement, DNR and reuse of old transfers are not going to disappear on 4K video. Last edited by Tok; 10-14-2013 at 03:55 PM. |
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#5567 | |
Blu-ray King
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#5568 |
Blu-ray Knight
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I have not seen 4k, but if it's a clear improvement given my current screen size and viewing distance (58" tv at 6 feet), than sure I would want it. However, with my current setup, I am very satisfied with 1080p and would remain just as satisfied with it even when something better comes along (in whatever form). If I were to have a dedicated HT room with a really large screen though than I would probably anticipate 4k more though. But as it is, I'm not really hankering for something better like I did with DVD (after I bought an HDTV back in the day).
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#5569 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Remember the reviewers are drooling over getting anything new. BD has been around over seven years. I've seen the HD vs UHD demos at BB. I rate those demos similar to Monster cable demos where they compared their HDMI cable vs. a generic composite cable. The material is cherry picked and text that is one pixel wide on UHD was made to look worse than it really would on a 1080p set (referring to the soccer demo). As I said I am not against, but the jump from HD to UHD is not the earth shattering experience that it was going from SD to HD. Remember even in the SD era we had large three gun CRT projection sets that showed the lacking quality of the signal at when blow up to 50 inches. Sure the average sized screen has increased, but I still don't think most homes can accommodate even larger screen sizes. IOW, I don's see the day when the average size screen is 100 inches. And when I say more than adequate referring to BD, I mean it looks pretty damn good. I really have my doubts about 4K especially if we don't get a true physical disc. IOW, Sony can keep their download and server solution. |
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#5570 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I think a lot of the skepticism is the result of many titles released on Blu-ray that did not have a optimal transfer. I thought the same about MANY LaserDisc and DVD titles. I have replaced quite a few DVD titles with the same title on Blu-ray. In most every case the video does show some improvement over the DVD version but there are many titles where the improvement is marginal. Audio is another matter, there are many catalog titles with Dolby Stereo soundtracks and they release them on Blu-ray (and DVD) with a only a 5.1 soundtrack. In most cases I find these to be inferior compared to the original Dolby Stereo and letting my processor do its thing. As usual, there are many exceptions to this. |
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#5571 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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4K+ is needed for the large screen commercial multiplexes where screens are measured in tens of feet not inches. As I said I am not for stifling tech advancements I just think that for the home video industry and the size of our displays we are reaching the plateau point of diminishing return despite the advancement in resolution. Sure there are other advancements there in the color gamuts, but I'll throw this out also. Couldn't some of the those advancements be applied to the existing resolution formats. VHS and Beta had tech advancements applied to them over the course of their run. Sony's already playing proprietary games with how their 'Mastered in 4K' BDs work with their hardware to increase color reproduction capabilities. Last edited by Tok; 10-14-2013 at 05:34 PM. |
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#5572 | ||
Blu-ray Ninja
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#5573 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Also a lot of the current content has been cherry picked and enhanced to help to sell the format. As I said early, the likelihood that all the ills of the home video industry are going to be cured with 4K transfers is extremely unlikely. Last edited by Tok; 10-14-2013 at 05:42 PM. |
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#5574 | |
Blu-ray King
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#5575 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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The most likely scenario for 4K in the near to mid term future is success on the level of Laserdisc meaning a niche market. Remember what sold HD. Live sporting events were a significant improvement in HD. Until 4K is broadcast at more than a prove the tech level it will be a slow climb. I don't see selling films in 4K as being a push for the general TV viewer to upgrade. That's probably blasphemy at this site, but we are an extremely small minority here compared to the average consumer. Sure we help drive the industry by adopting new tech, but the industry cannot rely on just us. So until things like the Superbowl and other major events are broadcast in 4K there won't be much to push casual viewers to buy 4K. I still know a number of people that don't think BD is much better than DVD. And many consumers have begrudgingly upgraded to BD. I don't think the prospect of purchasing films in a new resolution/format is going to be a large enough driving force. If wasn't for the changing television standards there was no need to move to BD. I just think that lauching another format is way too soon. I am sticking with BD until 4K is a commodity product. It won't be for some time. Last edited by Tok; 10-14-2013 at 06:00 PM. |
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#5576 | |
Blu-ray King
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#5577 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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The people that claim cutting the cord is easy are not sport fans and have little need for live event coverage. I still think that some of them are getting content they want through questionable means. I know some that have watched a few pirated streams of DirecTV Sunday NFL ticket when their team was in a big game. And I am sure a lot of those streaming/download proponents aren't buying TV episodes on iTunes or relying on Netflix exclusively. Last edited by Tok; 10-14-2013 at 06:08 PM. |
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#5578 | |
Blu-ray King
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#5579 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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I can't see that there will be such a real benefit for governments moving to 4K. if anyone is interested in a bit more * The RF is not precise to begin with and it can shift a bit as it is traveling, this is still true with ATSC but with NTSC there is no differentiation between different streams while with ATSC it can differentiate between the data packets. So if channel 20 was strong enough and there was something on 19 when you changed the channel to 19 it might have a ghost of what was shown on 20 as well (in other words a mess) ** each channel has 6 MHz in NTSC VHF-lo 2-6 is 54-88, VHF-hi 7-13 174-216 MHZ and UHF 14-69 470-806 MHz these have to do with how TV evolved in the early years. ATSC dropped the VHF-lo channels as well as free up any channel above 51 (i.e. it is now 470-698 MHz). With ATSC except for the smaller range available you also have real channel number and virtual channel number. So for example in the old NTSC days I had CBS that was channel 3 (i.e. VHF-lo), now it is channel 22 (UHF) for real but my TV still tells me it is channel 3 because the real number is 22 but the virtual is 3 so that people used to going to channel 3 for CBS can still do so. |
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#5580 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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There's too much of people wanting to get everything they demand and paying little or nothing for it. The race to the bottom continues... Last edited by Tok; 10-14-2013 at 08:20 PM. |
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Tags |
4-k uhd, blu-ray, ds9, failure, frustrated, oar, star trek deep space nine |
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