Why would anyone develop content for something so few will ever have?
See for yourself:
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I look at 4K tv's in 2013 the same way I saw HDTV/EDTV in 1998. It is the toy of the rich. In the last 10 years many people have upgraded to the tv they will use for the forseeable future - that is , at least 10 years. Should something happen that requires the purchase of a new TV in the meantime it will be a cheap replacement, not some fancy 4K sporting wundervision.
SDTV is 0.3 megapixels , EDTV was 0.4 megapixels
The official broadcast HDTV standard is about 0.9 megapixels. For most people going from SD to HD was a phenomenal increase , especially given the vastly increased screen size made available. The sony coined term- Full HD , in comparison is basically 2 megapixels. Again, here the jump from old fashioned SD quality dvds to say a bluray is pretty large- roughly 6 times as many pixels.
Ultra HD/4K is 4 megapixels. I'm not saying things won't head in this direction eventually but it's going to be much harder to appreciate the difference in fidelity offered by double the resolution. It's about the same jump as 720p to 1080p but you also need an enormous screen to take real advantage of it , or sit extremely close. On top of that, for the next few years HDTV will still be relegated to 720p, a resolution that will now be heinously upscaled to the same extent a dvd is on a 1080p set.
I'm not at all opposed to 4K or even 8K resolutions, more detail is pretty much always better but I think it's much better suited for a format where each pixel get's proper visibility- like for example a high end digital projector at a movie theater.
Why would anyone develop content for something so few will ever have?
I look at 4K tv's in 2013 the same way I saw HDTV/EDTV in 1998. It is the toy of the rich. In the last 10 years many people have upgraded to the tv they will use for the forseeable future - that is , at least 10 years. Should something happen that requires the purchase of a new TV in the meantime it will be a cheap replacement, not some fancy 4K sporting wundervision.
SDTV is 0.3 megapixels , EDTV was 0.4 megapixels
The official broadcast HDTV standard is about 0.9 megapixels. For most people going from SD to HD was a phenomenal increase , especially given the vastly increased screen size made available. The sony coined term- Full HD , in comparison is basically 2 megapixels. Again, here the jump from old fashioned SD quality dvds to say a bluray is pretty large- roughly 6 times as many pixels.
Ultra HD/4K is 4 megapixels. I'm not saying things won't head in this direction eventually but it's going to be much harder to appreciate the difference in fidelity offered by double the resolution. It's about the same jump as 720p to 1080p but you also need an enormous screen to take real advantage of it , or sit extremely close. On top of that, for the next few years HDTV will still be relegated to 720p, a resolution that will now be heinously upscaled to the same extent a dvd is on a 1080p set.
I'm not at all opposed to 4K or even 8K resolutions, more detail is pretty much always better but I think it's much better suited for a format where each pixel get's proper visibility- like for example a high end digital projector at a movie theater.
http://www.xbitlabs.com/news/multim..._with_Media_Server_Free_4K_Movies_Xperia.htmlSonys 4K LED UHDTV to Come Bundled with Media Server, Free 4K Movies, Xperia Tablet.
Sonys XBR-84X900 4K UHDTV for $25 000 Starts to Ship
Which was the price of Sony's FullHD tvs half a year before the PS3 announcement. Just curious.Lol, I don't see PS4 pushing a lot of 4k TV's at that price.
Sony's message : PS4 + 4K TV = Time to get 4 jobs!4K TV and PS4 combo only $26000! Get financed today!
Um... Wasn't Avatar shot and mastered at 2K? Not a good comparison.See for yourself:
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Which was the price of Sony's FullHD tvs half a year before the PS3 announcement. Just curious.
Sony is dead.
Sony is dead.
That doesn't necessarily mean that the studios will be so quick to give consumers a 4K version of a film to own/possessAlmost all films are already developed in 4K http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_cinema
That doesn't necessarily mean that the studios will be so quick to give consumers a 4K version of a film to own/possess
Besides that, films shot for decades on 35mm film have enough resolution to easily surpass 1080p/2K (it's closer to 3 or 3.25K if I remember right, but most are just scanned at 4K now anyways) so the content has always been there.
I just want the D!Gimme that CLED.
I don't doubt that technically it will become easy to deliver 4K content, just that studios would be so willing to give consumers what are essentially master-quality copies of their (very) expensive property. In the end I suspect they'll get dragged into it by other non-movie content such that they'll have to release stuff in 4K just to keep pace.The only way consumer grade 4k will be available is if the Bluray standard evolves. H.265 is 50% more efficient, and BDXL is twice the storage data of a 50 GB disc. A 1080p 50 GB Disc would need 4 times the space for 4k in H.264. In H.265, you can save 50% space, and the disc size will double. So its a perfect storm.
I just want my affordable OLED. When will I be able to buy mine?
I just want my affordable OLED. When will I be able to buy mine?
What you actually want is CLED. OLED has too many headaches over hte long term.
Just saw this TV at the Sony Store today. I was impressed. It will take a while, but I imagine all TVs at least 42" and above with eventually be 4K. It will start at 84" and slowly trickle it's way down to smaller sizes.
Would love to have that TV, but of course it's $25,000 and there is no content to support it.
I don't doubt that technically it will become easy to deliver 4K content, just that studios would be so willing to give consumers what are essentially master-quality copies of their (very) expensive property. In the end I suspect they'll get dragged into it by other non-movie content such that they'll have to release stuff in 4K just to keep pace.
I've never seen a 4k set in person, but is this the same kind of thing as "1080p is worthless below 40 inches"? Because that was some goddamn bullshit. I bought a 720p 32" tv, and it was a terrible decision. Going between a 1080 set and this one is immediately obvious.
Like they did with 3D, Sony is planning to cover everything about 4K : pro cinema cameras, home cameras, home projectors, cinema projectors, tvs, bluerays, movies, games, consoles etc.Studios are already giving us master quality stuff with bluray. A lot of films are shot in 2K resolution. Bluray is pretty close to that. Especially 2.35:1 films:
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_common_resolutions
Toy Story 1 and 2 was re rendered at a higher resolution (1080p) than what was in theaters. I think the same thing was done for finding nemo.
Still, I don't think we will ever get true master quality films at home because of compression. Uncompressed films use terabytes of space.
As for 4K. We won't be using the DCI standard anyway. We're using 3840x2160p. I wish we would have gotten true 4K at 4096x2160p and 17:9 TV's.
Yeah buying a 720p set at all is a bad idea. My 21" iMac is 1080p, and you can be sure I would tell the difference if it was 720, even if I sat back a few feet.I've never seen a 4k set in person, but is this the same kind of thing as "1080p is worthless below 40 inches"? Because that was some goddamn bullshit. I bought a 720p 32" tv, and it was a terrible decision. Going between a 1080 set and this one is immediately obvious.
What the hell, what does this have to do with any thing?
Sony doesn't have much in reserve right now, any investiment they make now must give return, or they'll be in a dire situation. It looks like they are investing lots of money in those 4k TVs, and I believe those will flop hard on their faces. And I don't think Sony can survive that.
See for yourself:
http://swhomevid.site40.net/avatarcomparison.jpg[IMG][/QUOTE]
except you won't be looking at a 4k TV from only 20 inches away.
Rest assured, 4K will not be a significant selling point next gen. The gen after MAYBE. We don't even have an appropriate optical media for 4K yet, nor anywhere near the bandwidth to download it in a reasonable amount of time.
I'm expecting someone to show off a sub $15k 4k tv at CES, bring on January!
Um... Wasn't Avatar shot and mastered at 2K? Not a good comparison.
4k hdtv and a quad-sli and we're good.
That's gaming done right.
sony 84" 4k vs sharp 80" 1080p is a whole lot of different...only the rich can afford 4k at this time.