SuicideUZI
Member
Well I have no doubt it will have better image quality / black levels than LCD when the final product comes out, but how will it handle motion and input lag compared to OLED and highend plasma's?
i haven't seen a dv cam in the consumer market for purchase in a long time and i aven't really seen a dv cam in te professional market for awhile . I'm sure there are some who have not made the switch yet , but the format is basicly dead .
Who the hell still cares about 480i in this day and age?
This too.It's Flying_Phoenix. All his old Soviet porn is in 480i.
It still looks like shit.The Wii outputs 480p over component video.
If true, wow....
I'm not sure why you're making assumptions about OLED vs plasma - at least it sounds like you're implying they're similar.Well I have no doubt it will have better image quality / black levels than LCD when the final product comes out, but how will it handle motion and input lag compared to OLED and highend plasma's?
Oh shi----
Speculation from some AVSers is that the LCD TV being paired against the XLED is the 55 XBR-HX929. If so ... DAMN. It's one of the highest rated LCD's yet released.
Can any owners here confirm or speculate whether that the case?
Another interesting piece of speculation ... this may actually be a Quantum Dot display (QLED or QD LED as they've been referred to). I would think they'd be more than happy to mention QD or nano crystals, but maybe since people just aren't all that aware of its significance there's no reason to mention it as yet? Sony actually is known to be R&Ding quantum dot displays.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_dot_display
The rep does mention it's semiconductor based ... and the fact they're calling it 'Crystal' LED (QD displays use nano-scale crystals within the diode) ... it's interesting. Hmmmmmmm ....
Yeah, if it's sitting next to Sony's top panel - that impressive (and ballsyWow, that is amazing if true. It clearly looks better and with more development time it might look even more awesome, Sony has a real winner in their hands if they play the right cards.
I take it that this is still sample-and-hold? Its the only current sour point for OLED tech for me currently, black levels and viewing angles are as good as they're ever going to need to be.
I wonder what the potential is for burn-in with this tech.
Unknown. If it's similar to traditional LED, they do age ... though I believe more linearly than OLED ... so I wouldn't be too concerned. If it's QD, then there's even less to worry about.I wonder what the potential is for burn-in with this tech.
Cool beans.EDIT: Raistlin: I just saw your post before I clicked "submit." As you can see, my friend at CES is reporting the same thing. He did not get this info from AVS, but from the show itself. While he did not mention a specific model number, it's pretty easy to connect those dots.
I hope you're right. Would be awesome if they were this far along.I stated my reasons for thinking it is some type of QD-LED.
Cool beans.
Now that we know the original 3.5x contrast thing was in daylight viewing, and that night viewing is essentially off the charts ... and change you can ask your buddy if he heard anything further regarding response times?
All we've heard is 10x faster ... but 10x what exactly? I'm not sure if they even disclose the pixel response measurements for their LCDs?
I hope you're right. Would be awesome if they were this far along.
I've already asked him about response times. I'll bug him some more later.
http://www.sony.co.uk/biz/product/camcorders
Out of these 8 professional ecosystems, only three are tapeless.
Tape is not dead (yet).
2011 will bring the SR Memory solid state recording options already planned as part of a strategy of continual development
Betamax, mini-disc, SACD, when will Sony learn?
See those bands there? Journalists noted they didn't see anything like that while viewing ... but it was showing up in some photos. Looks like they're using some type of simulated backlight scanning to improve temporal resolution?![]()
Hopefully this post helps explain it a bit.I don't know what that means!
Contrast seems as good, maybe even better (basically unmeasurable in a dark room - and 3.5x higher than top-of-line LCD in daylight)But I've some questions I'm itching for someone to ask Sony. Principally timescales for release, manufacturing costs (surely they must be there seeing as Sony have seemingly ditched OLED for this tech) and some realworld comparisons to OLED on contrast and response times (unless these have already been released??).
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Not sure how I didn't notice this previously.
See those bands there? Journalists noted they didn't see anything like that while viewing ... but it was showing up in some photos. Looks like they're using some type of simulated backlight scanning to improve temporal resolution?![]()
DISAPPOINTMENTONHmmm. Gonna throw my two cents in here as a pro photographer...
I think it's probably just an effect of Pulse Width Modulation, which is sadly nothing new for us who shoot electronics (and especially DSLR videographers) when shooting LED/OLED screens at certain brightness levels under certain shutter speeds with digital cameras, rearing it's ugly head.
no probThanks Raistlin!
Unless everything they've said has been part of an elaborate troll (primarily towards LG and Samsung) ... this ain't coming out this year. If Sony is to be believed, they won't even confirm nor deny whether this will definitely become a product (though obviously unless reliability or long-term costs are expected to be an issue - it's gonna hit eventually).I noticed Sony didn't show off a 900-series LED TV, typically their XBR line. Do you guys think they left it out as they may bring the CLED later this year as a replacement for that series?
Hmmm. Gonna throw my two cents in here as a pro photographer...
I think it's probably just an effect of Pulse Width Modulation, which is sadly nothing new for us who shoot electronics (and especially DSLR videographers) when shooting LED/OLED screens at certain brightness levels under certain shutter speeds with digital cameras, rearing it's ugly head.
in November conference call with Investors, Sony has explained what they did to the TV division:
- Sony put man behind their recent surge in camera tech to run its TV division. So the guy that made their cameras pretty much the best and very profitable business, is now running their TV division.
- Division was split to 3 parts - Outsourced, In-House and Future Tech, to give each division better ability to compete. It seemed as emphasis was made on future tech, meaning not current LCDs.
Also, SLCD was sold because it was built on idea that the market will expand to 2x the size, but it didnt. Which made it too expensive to run. Also, Samsung itself outsources 40% of their LCD production.
I feel like people are forgetting that Sony has had bigger R&D budget than Samsung over the last 5-6 years. Sony is one of the highest spending companies when it comes to R&D, in the world, and they have budgeted increase for the next 2 years.
Actually do you mind going into some detail regarding this topic?
Actually do you mind going into some detail regarding this topic?
It's the viewing angles, really. Sony's 55-inch Crystal LED display prototype is an impressive piece, but being able to view clearly from near-90 degree angles, color intact, is quite a spectacle in person
blu ray...
wait wat
As nice as this sounds...who watches TV from a 90 degree angle?
Is it really taking off in any meaningful way? I mean it won the format war kind of by default, but it seems people are going straight to streaming media rather than blu-ray.
And lol at people hoping Sony price this tech below the competition. Like that ever happens.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2012-01-10/blu-ray-sales-2011/52473310/1-Sales of Blu-ray discs topped $2 billion for the first time, up 19% from 2010.
-The number of U.S. homes with Blu-ray players grew to 40 million, 38% higher than in 2010.
-Also on the rise: the number of homes with HDTVs, which now tops 74.5 million
-Digital sales, including streaming movies, rose 50% to $3.4 billion.
-Total movie rentals remained steady at $7.5 billion, down less than 1%.
-DVD sales dropped 20% to $6.8 billion.
-Hollywood hopes to keep Blu-ray disc momentum rolling in 2012 with increased portability of purchased films. The first discs supporting the industry's UltraViolet format were launched in 2011. That format allows for downloading a digital version of a film into a cloud-based online locker that can be accessed via smartphones and tablets at no extra cost.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aTCnhc-JHToI hope this doesn't end like Crystal Pepsi.
As has been said ... really no one. The point however is that the image retains nearly perfect chroma and luma at any viewing angle ... which includes viewing angles people actually do use that are problematic in other display types.As nice as this sounds...who watches TV from a 90 degree angle?
Define 'meaningful way'? It's generating good revenue and margins ... and growth is increasing.Is it really taking off in any meaningful way? I mean it won the format war kind of by default, but it seems people are going straight to streaming media rather than blu-ray.
What about vertical viewing angles? Is this expected to perform as well for them?As has been said ... really no one. The point however is that the image retains nearly perfect chroma and luma at any viewing angle ... which includes viewing angles people actually do use that are problematic in other display types.
It's simply an extreme example to convey that it will have no issues. Plus, it looks cool.
Yeah, the visible gamma on my old laptop monitor changes a lot when slanted the wrong way.As has been said ... really no one. The point however is that the image retains nearly perfect chroma and luma at any viewing angle ... which includes viewing angles people actually do use that are problematic in other display types.
It's simply an extreme example to convey that it will have no issues. Plus, it looks cool.
Going to be a bitch to get 6 million LEDs in a 32" TV.
Funny how OLED is easier on a small screen and this is seemingly easier on a huge screen.
and crystal tech? Quantum dots? Nano crystals? The Sony marketing team are going to have a field day coming up with fancy branding around that
Going to be a bitch to get 6 million LEDs in a 32" TV.
Funny how OLED is easier on a small screen and this is seemingly easier on a huge screen.
What is the point of making a 32" TV?
For my arcade cabinet, duh. Fighting games are better on a screen that isn't the size of me.
viewing angles: because no one sits in front of their tvs.
Thanks for the information! I wasn't aware digital CMOS sensors work sequentially.It's really complicated, but I'll try.
This is how I understand it to work:
A CMOS sensor in a digital camera doesn't actually record the whole frame all at once. It records a sequence of lines/pixels/whatever. It does this very very quickly, so most of the time you don't have a problem, even at fairly high shutter speeds. However, when attempting to record a very fast event. IE a very fast-moving object or say, an electronic flash lighting the scene at a sync/flash duration speed above the recommended speed of the sensor, you can get fuckups.
In the case of shooting an LED display, sometimes, as the CMOS sensor in the camera sequentially records the frame, it picks up the Pulse Width modulation (basically, the light source, in this case the LEDs, flashing on and off, extremely rapidly) which they do to control brightness output of the LEDs. The CMOS sensor records a set of lines while the LED's are on full blast, resulting in a bright "bar" on the screen, and when the CMOS sensor continues on the next set of lines, it sees the dimmed or off LED's, resulting in a dark "bar" for that sequence of lines being recorded. When the next sequence is done, the sensor picks up the LED's turned back on, ect, ect. ect.
If you shoot video through the CMOS sensor, and this occurs at a rate that is captured by the sensor, the effect known as "rolling shutter" will sometimes cause these light and dark "bars" to appear to "roll" through the display, slowly or quickly, or not at all, depending on how the scanning speed of the sensor and the rapid pulsing of the display happens to sync up. (Think of how you can sometimes look at the wheels of a car next to you while you are traveling, and the wheels of the neighboring car seem to turn in slow motion, or sometimes even appear to be turning backwards.) But in the case of a modern LED or OLED screen, it is not the display making these "bars," like you would see in the case of an old-school CRT, where the electron gun is scanning across the tube, it is the scanning of the CMOS sensor in the camera causing them to appear.
I hope that's enough to get the point across...I really don't want to get into the notched waveforms and all that stuff. Actually I don't think I'm qualified to go into that level of detail!
Basically, it's an annoying bug that pops up from time to time for us photographers of this stuff. It sucks, because a lot of the time you don't see it happening until you go to post with your footage (especially in video shoots.) That's why I try hard never shoot anything with a screen like that without having the ability to proof it on the spot. I've found when it does pop up, usually a simple adjustment of either the display brightness (which changes the rate of the PWM) or changing the ISO setting on the camera (which changes how fast the CMOS sequences) is enough to change the timing enough to eliminate the issue. Changing the shutter speed would seem the obvious thing to do, but that doesn't work, like it would if you were shooting film, because even though you are dragging the shutter, the sensor in the camera is still going to be scanning at the same rate...it'l just have more time to do more scans with the shutter open. Often there is cussing and fumbling for ND filter involved too. And of course there's always the option of shooting the display in film and popping that image in in post, if you are allowed to do so. Obviously in this case, where you are trying to show the display of a device in a live setting at a trade show, these poor saps didn't have any of those options at their disposal.
It's for when you are watching with a group of people. It's a luxury we all had back when we were on CRT and it's nice that it's coming back.
It's already here. There are affordable TVs out now with very wide viewing angles, plasmas in particular.