Due to having the pleasure of witnessing a 4K Laser with Warp correction in our steep theatre yesterday, a couple conceptual questions arise:
1. When did DCI loosen their stranglehold on disallowing any pixel level geometry correction other than cropping in DCI setups? If they did?
2. We ran our 2k as a live backup, but in aligning to the primary's bottom/top masking, our resulting scope image was narrower than their Mystique warp corrected scope image. What is the origin of this difference? They used our normal scope side masking position, before changing the 2k size we had a taller image.
My instinct was to either blame our periscope mirrors relationship, or the fact their warp correct was perhaps doing more than simply keystone correcting, it was also correcting the vertical stretch resulting from our steep angle? (And in doing so has to sacrifice some horizontal and vertical size overall). Additional lens shift down was required after enabling the warp, that was my primary clue.
3. Why they make twist/warp licensing it so darn expensive? This is free if not standard tech/features with any Non-DCI large venue projector. Or were our visiting techs just citing the "full price" for the top of the line Mystique license for multi-projector arrays etc etc (Said 17,000$ for the Mystique license). The "automatic" features of Mystique make sense to charge good money for, but the underlying warp stuff is pretty standard non-DCI projector tech.
If curious, we left our 2k backup within their masking, and removed my keystone cropping because the un cropped image was still within the side masking. The other option would have been to match their width with my keystone crop still in play, and add top and bottom crop until we fit the masking. That probably would have "looked" better, but with tons of crop sacrificing. But backup was of course not needed.
1. When did DCI loosen their stranglehold on disallowing any pixel level geometry correction other than cropping in DCI setups? If they did?
2. We ran our 2k as a live backup, but in aligning to the primary's bottom/top masking, our resulting scope image was narrower than their Mystique warp corrected scope image. What is the origin of this difference? They used our normal scope side masking position, before changing the 2k size we had a taller image.
My instinct was to either blame our periscope mirrors relationship, or the fact their warp correct was perhaps doing more than simply keystone correcting, it was also correcting the vertical stretch resulting from our steep angle? (And in doing so has to sacrifice some horizontal and vertical size overall). Additional lens shift down was required after enabling the warp, that was my primary clue.
3. Why they make twist/warp licensing it so darn expensive? This is free if not standard tech/features with any Non-DCI large venue projector. Or were our visiting techs just citing the "full price" for the top of the line Mystique license for multi-projector arrays etc etc (Said 17,000$ for the Mystique license). The "automatic" features of Mystique make sense to charge good money for, but the underlying warp stuff is pretty standard non-DCI projector tech.
If curious, we left our 2k backup within their masking, and removed my keystone cropping because the un cropped image was still within the side masking. The other option would have been to match their width with my keystone crop still in play, and add top and bottom crop until we fit the masking. That probably would have "looked" better, but with tons of crop sacrificing. But backup was of course not needed.
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