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Old 07-28-2007, 04:21 AM   #1
dialog_gvf dialog_gvf is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by richteer View Post
Obviously disc storage will be shared between the main picture and any PIP content, but what a bout bandwidth? Blu-ray has a bandwidth of 48 Mb/s, but is that bandwidth shared between the main feature and the PIP content (when the latter is being displayed), or does each stream have the full 48 Mb/s available to it?
The bandwidth is shared between all audio and video channels (and subtitles, etc). Think of packets of information continuously laid out on the disc. The player uses the content it wants, and throws away the content it doesn't.

The BDMV transfer spec is 54Mbps from the drive. And the mux bandwidth is 48Mbps.

Gary
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Old 07-28-2007, 05:30 PM   #2
phloyd phloyd is offline
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This whole thing about HD PiP is kinda interesting.

The scenarios really are as follows:

480p PiP using not a lot of bandwidth.

720p Secondary using maybe 10 - 15 Mbps, leaving more bandwidth than HD DVD has left over.

1080p using close to half the bandwidth, limiting the peak bandwidth for the main feature unless a stat mux encode is done.

I think that any studio would need to have damn good reason to use 1080p for the secondary. However the 720p option is still HD and leaves a decent amount of bandwidth capacity for the main feature.
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Old 07-28-2007, 05:46 PM   #3
tvted tvted is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by phloyd View Post

I think that any studio would need to have damn good reason to use 1080p for the secondary. However the 720p option is still HD and leaves a decent amount of bandwidth capacity for the main feature.
Agreed completely, and as I suggested in the Insider's Thread I would prefer the primary stream gettting the lion's share.

Its interesting that this might disappoint some, in light of the fact that the vast majority of us in various polls have suggested that extras are not a major consideration. PIP might be useful to film students and some cinephiles but if I'm anything like tha rest I'm not going to spend a lot of time with it. Given my personal time constraints I've still about 20 BD's on the shelf yet to be watched.

ted
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Old 07-28-2007, 07:01 PM   #4
WickyWoo WickyWoo is offline
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No matter what, no one is going to be shooting much 1080p PiP, except for maybe some FX comparisons. If someone thinks they'll do a 1080 stream alongside the movie that's just not going to happen, because there's honestly no reason for it
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Old 07-28-2007, 07:12 PM   #5
Smackos Smackos is offline
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Also, might be wrong in my own personal point of view on this but since HD is 4 to 5 times the resolution of Standard Def even at larger screen sizes surely at most 720p is needed for the secondry stream since just like a seperate screen it'd have it's own viewable distances at where HD is visible over SD..being a quarter of your screen is'nt going to make any real difference for all but the ultra high end/largest projector screens etc.. any thoughts?
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Old 07-28-2007, 07:36 PM   #6
The Big Blue The Big Blue is offline
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With certain PIP features you might want to swap images in which case you'd want the best possible vid. for the secondary stream?
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Old 07-28-2007, 07:42 PM   #7
dialog_gvf dialog_gvf is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Big Blue View Post
With certain PIP features you might want to swap images in which case you'd want the best possible vid. for the secondary stream?
Sure. The thing here is that creative people come up with ways to use features that nobody ever thought of. So, you don't want to limit the possibilities because of current thinking or minor cost reductions.

But, here are some I can think of:

For an animated feature, you could choose to watch the voice actors doing their lines with the feature as PiP. Robin Williams, for example, is known to be physical in his voice acting.

Or how about watching Monster House in the mo-cap form? (The actors wore suits and the computer animated over their physical performances)

Or the 300 and World of Tomorrow blue screen.

Gary

Last edited by dialog_gvf; 07-28-2007 at 07:44 PM.
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Old 07-28-2007, 09:42 PM   #8
richteer richteer is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dialog_gvf View Post
The bandwidth is shared between all audio and video channels (and subtitles, etc). Think of packets of information continuously laid out on the disc. The player uses the content it wants, and throws away the content it doesn't.
Thanks for the info. I'd say that shared bandwidth is another reason to eschew PIP. I want all available bandwidth dedicated for the main feature! Even if one isn't watching the PIP, presumably the movie will have to be authored at a sufficiently low bitrate to leave bandwidth for the PIP? In other words, does the availablity of PIP on a given movie restrict that movie's bandwidth, even if the PIP feature isn't being used?
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Old 07-29-2007, 03:48 PM   #9
Anthony P Anthony P is offline
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Just my .02$

the AV is 48mbps but video is 40mbps, also unlike HD DVD there is no limit on PiP just that the two together must be <=40

why could so much be needed for "PiP" because it is not PiP but a secondary video.

Here are some examples

Imagine the original Star Wars where you can see the original and the changes in the latest DVD? Where you can see either in a PiP and switch back and forth


The second screen could be a full screen PiP, the director walking all over the screen while talking (for example taped in front of a green screen that is superimposed

In an other thread there are a few of us asking for real 3D, the idea is to have both be full screen and then output it two projectors
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