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#1 |
Blu-ray Count
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Did a quick search and couldn't find anything on this:
http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/15/m...ideo-standard/ What are the chances ANY of our players would be able to play this codec? |
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#2 | |
Blu-ray Count
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Interesting:
Quote:
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#3 |
Senior Member
Apr 2012
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I assume we can call this MPEG-5?
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#8 | |
Senior Member
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Bluray players and other hardware devices rely on hardware decoders. The chipsets can decode exactly what they were designed for and nothing more. If you've a reasonably powerful CPU in your PC you should be able to software decode it, or with an upgrade to a future GPU that has a HEVC hardware decoder. |
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#12 | |
Gaming Moderator
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H.265 has been approved by the ITU.
http://techcrunch.com/2013/01/25/h265-is-approved/ Quote:
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#13 | |
Senior Member
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#14 |
Power Member
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I just saw this posted in the Technology section on Google News.
http://www.slashgear.com/new-h-265-v...ates-27266856/ http://hothardware.com/News/ITU-Appr...eaming-Video-/ If this only needs half the bit rate, then wouldn't it allow 4K enough space to fit on a 50 GB Blu-ray? I realize that the studios would have to quit putting extra stuff on the same disc as the movie, but why wouldn't it work? It would be cheaper for them to put the movie on one disc and any extras on a second disc, than it would for them to start using 100/128 GB BDXL discs. All that would have to be done is making new players that play the codec, just like they did with 3D. The discs can stay the same. ![]() |
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#15 | |
Senior Member
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#16 | |
Active Member
Aug 2008
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Last edited by lobosrul; 01-28-2013 at 05:42 PM. |
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#18 |
Senior Member
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#19 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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IMO, seeing a new disc-based format for 4k is unlikely as Blu-ray still has yet to fully overtake DVD making 4k physical media adoption slim. The only way it would happen would be if it was rolled out like laserdisc, with $99 movies. |
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#20 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() C’mon, lobos have got better hearing than that! ![]() Let me tell you about dem humans. Perhaps that 30% figure is true if you think humans only see in ‘PSNR’. The reality is that humans see and process imagery ‘subjectively’. Read the pdf listed in this link for science beyond what you’ve heard… https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...ly#post6994343 And/or, from a peer-reviewed article by Jens-Rainer Ohm et.al., http://www.hhi.fraunhofer.de/fileadm...erformance.pdf b.t.w., that be the same Jens who co-chairs the JCT-VC committee that did the work on HEVC, which ITU membership recently approved….https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...189830&page=38 For those having an aversion to plodding through the scientific literature, in essence, evidence shows HEVC subjectively provides ~ 50% bit rate reduction on average compared to H.264/AVC. |
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