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#181 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-T/studygro...deo/jctvc.aspx Even the co-chairmen of the team group call it HEVC. See #11 for the agenda of the next meeting in regards to work pertaining to range and scalable extensions in the logistics doc. at the top - http://wftp3.itu.int/av-arch/jctvc-s..._06_R_Sapporo/ |
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#182 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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http://www.displayweek.org/ b.t.w., despite what’s stated in this cnet article…. http://www.cnet.com/news/hands-on-wi...k-televisions/ about quantum dots and Sony See the full program… http://www.displayweek.org/Portals/5...%20Program.pdf and note the Invited Paper by Hirohisa Ishino, Sony Corp. entitled “Novel Wide-Color-Gamut LED Backlight for 4K x 2K LCD Embedded with Quantum-Dot Technology” which I don’t see evidence of being withdrawn. |
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#183 | |
Active Member
Dec 2007
Ft. Myers, FL
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#184 | |
Active Member
Dec 2007
Ft. Myers, FL
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#185 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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The soul of Sony seems in angst, and not just in regards to Sony Electronics, but in other divisions like ‘Pictures’ too - http://www.glassdoor.com/Reviews/Emp...RVW4228188.htm |
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#186 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#187 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Question for people to ponder....In what format do content producers send their 4K source files to Netflix?
HEVC Quote:
or something else? |
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#188 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Initially DPX, but now they’re supplied IMF/MXF (JPEG 2000 codec). I won’t talk about ProRes as that’s a proprietary format and I knows how some here feel about those proprietary things. |
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#189 | |
Senior Member
Oct 2007
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#190 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I mean, if they really desire to be well-informed and equitable as to ‘standards’ organizations, they should also use the designation ‘ISO/IEC 23008-2 MPEG-H Part 2’ where the HEVC standard is also defined, or at least MPEG-H Part 2 but I guess that’s too long to type out; plus, these days with B.T. 2020, the ITU is currently the ‘flavor of the day’ rather than the MPEG (http://mpeg.chiariglione.org/standards/mpeg-h ) Anyway, very recently, HEVC Dash data set (which can be played with open source tools) was offered up by the 4Ever project French people just weeks ago at the MMSys Conference last March in Singapore to help with development of over-the-top UHD services …. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2563672 All can read about it for free (in English) here - http://t.co/IvBiDL94dC (b.t.w., in the paper H.264 is mentioned but no mention of H.265, just HEVC ![]() Last edited by Penton-Man; 05-27-2014 at 12:15 AM. Reason: typos galore |
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#191 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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It seems that whatever term is used in the beginning is what sticks, most seem to know MPEG-2 but few seem to equate H.262 to MPEG -2. One thing that seems to be very consistent with our industry is we are very inconsistent. Just checkout the variations of dB, color codes, etc.
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#192 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Rough analogy (not that you or Ron disparage 4K) – hobbyists or lay persons say things like cataract surgery -> “a new clear lens”….actually I could find an exact example of that on this very forum if I were to do some searching. People with some real (rather than superficial) knowledge in the field of vision science would simply say IOL - https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...ol#post9121407 (i.e. IOL for intraocular lens). |
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#193 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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With some caveats…
1. It seems that HEVC captures the graininess of film source material with greater clarity than does H.264, so that (combined with the higher resolution of 4K tvs) makes the imagery appear a bit more grainy than with H.264 encoded material displayed on 1080p TVs. |
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#194 |
Senior Member
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My personal issue with 4K is that the majority of the people in a home environment sit too far away from their displays for 1080p, yet alone 4K. They will get no perceived benefit from the upgrade. I do see a benefit on the studio side though because 1080p (or 2K if you prefer), has less resolution than 35mm film and 4K is an upgrade in that realm. On the personal side, I'd prefer to see 10 or 12 bit color versus higher resolution because I think the overall benefits are better.
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#196 | |||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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At the very least, it is hoped that 4K (over time, meaning years) will drive the sales of cheaper, larger flat panel displays, which is itself is a good thing because bigger and cheaper is always better and the added ‘largeness’ should also serve to more ‘value’ being had at ‘typical’ viewing distances. Regardless of whether or not that ultimately comes to fruition, I know you’ve been away from the forum for quite some time now so I’ll post an exchange that Kris and I previously had on *the value* of 4K. Quote:
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As an aside, not you Denon but, there are those on the *lecture/blogger circuit* who actually enjoy teasing apart the relative merit of 4K vs. other UHD parameters in an attempt to drive the direction of ‘Beyond HD’ consumer viewing in the home by shaming the consumer electronics display manufacturers into doing what they (the lecturers) want to be worked on from a ‘purist engineering perspective standpoint’ (i.e. concentrate on other UHD parameters and just leave spatial resolution alone at the 1080 level). Good luck with that antagonistic strategy. I prefer the power-holding entities who are actual stakeholders in Beyond HD to work with each other in terms of mutual concessions and compromises rather than the ‘shaming strategy’. I think that eventually a reasonable combination (if only in a step-wise fashion) can be settled upon where we can progress beyond the specs of what we currently watch at home now. You’ll note there is no 1080p spatial resolution option listed in the highly regarded B.T. 2020 - http://www.itu.int/dms_pubrec/itu-r/...8-I!!PDF-E.pdf |
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#197 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#198 | |
Senior Member
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#199 | ||
Active Member
Feb 2009
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Last edited by eriaur; 06-25-2014 at 08:12 PM. |
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#200 |
Active Member
Dec 2007
Ft. Myers, FL
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The executive summary has been released from last week's meeting of ITU-T SG16. The extensions to HEVC have been approved ('consented' in ITU terminology). This removes one technical roadblock for getting the BD UHD spec. completed and allows the manufacturers to move forward with designing/producing the HEVC related hardware/software that will used with BD UHD.
(full text of exec. summary is at: http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-T/studygro...ults-1406.aspx) Below is extracted directly from that summary: "Video coding: The 2nd edition of ITU-T H.265 HEVC was Consented It includes three important types of extensions of HEVC coding capabilities, that will increase the quality of compressed video and better user experience: |
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