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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: What is it with Sony and 4k media?
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Bobby Henderson
"Ask me about Trajan."
Posts: 10973
From: Lawton, OK, USA
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 12-03-2013 02:40 PM
quote: Sony 4K Ad "It makes everything you watch look better."
Uh.....no. No it doesn't. Not unless the TV is fed a video signal with 4K native resolution.
A 4K resolution TV set might make a lot of content look worse. 1080p might blow up to 4K and look passable, the same way 720p looks when blown up to 1080p. 720p & 480i/p content on a 4K TV might look really terrible unless the TV set has some active, intelligent image resampling functions (something better than bicubic smoothing) to hide an otherwise very obvious, sharply defined pixel grid.
quote: Remember when the salesmen told customers that "this new dvd/bluray player will upconvert to make all of your DVDs 1080P!"
It reminds me of so many people who tinker around with Photoshop, taking low resolution images and "uprezzing" them to what they think is high resolution but is really blurry bull crap pock-marked with rounded jaggies. It's really funny when they do it to severely compressed images grabbed off the Internet.
quote: Marcel Birgelen I recently read an article that gives the impression that 4K broadcasting isn't to be expected in the near future, because of the monumental costs associated to it...
4K for broadcast is impractical. Unless some tremendous break-throughs are made in compression technology I don't see 4K being squeezed into a 6MHz over the air broadcast channel. Bandwidth for cable and satellite delivery is pretty finite, even moreso than OTA HD. Aside from the technological challenges a bunch of other changes would have to be made to many pieces of equipment in video production and broadcast transmission -not to mention a lot of changes in home gear too. I remember all the hoops Dish Network had customers jumping through to switch out MPEG-2 based receivers for new models capable of handling MPEG-4. That process would have to be repeated with a jump from MPEG-4 AVC to H.265 HEVC.
Funny thing: that transition from H.264 to H.265 could still happen yet not deliver 4K to customers. Cable/satellite companies could make the jump to squeeze more channels of 1080i HD Lite or 720p content into the same space (like a satellite) using H.265, just like what they did with abandoning MPEG-2 for MPEG-4.
The Blu-ray Disc Association is working on new 4K standards for Blu-ray. This will probably require a new player and maybe even a different kind of 4K TV set. They're hoping to maintain backward compatibility with existing 1080p BD movies. With what they're wanting to do, my guess is they'll need a significantly higher capacity optical disc. In addition to upping the resolution to 4K, they want to increase color depth -which would also increase file sizes and bandwidth demands. The BDA would like to go from REC709 to REC2020, going from 4:2:0 chroma subsampling to 4:4:4. From what I've heard, current 4K TV sets don't support REC2020.
As far as movie streaming goes, I think it's a pain in the ass enough as it is just getting a heavily compressed 720p stream to come through without a lot of fits and starts. I think residential Internet connections need a great deal of improvement before streaming 4K video can become practical.
quote: Steve Guttag Now for BluRay (or media in general, including download), that may be another story however, in the home market, 4K and above is going to be a thing of diminishing returns given present technology. How small are the pixels in a 4K display in the typical home environment on say a 60" and smaller screen? How does that compare to HDTV?
Going by some standard TV monitor sizes, 4K (3840 X 2160) would come out to the following: 65" = 68 pixels per inch 55" = 80 pixels per inch 46" = 96 pixels per inch 40" = 110 pixels per inch 70' wide cinema screen = 4.57 pixels per inch
Divide those ppi levels in half for 1080p resolution. A 70' wide movie screen showing 2K material (2048 X 852) is showing imagery with only 2.43 pixels per inch resolution.
If those TV screen resolutions sound like overkill, consider the following ppi stats: iPad Air = 264ppi (2048 x 1536) Google Nexus 10 = 300ppi (2560 x 1600) iPad Mini Retina Display = 326ppi (2048 x 1536) Galaxy S4 phone = 441ppi (1080p)
Naturally, I'd like to see movie theaters leading the way in transitioning from 2K to 4K. Maybe we'll start seeing a bigger shift in that direction once IMAX starts installing its laser-based 4K projectors. We'll see competing big screen theaters put in their own dual 4K laser systems. Perhaps some theaters will advertise: "we've already had 4K for quite some time."
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