Angelus Errare
Banned
Poor Toshiba, they've had a 4K TV out for a year and they go unnoticed, Sony announces their 4K TV and the tech industry is set ablaze with both negative and positive news/opinions.
Yeah, I think that's the case.
I'm just saying I don't see a need for 4k stuff.
If Sony finds their market, fine. Great. If they don't overshoot it. And we all know Sony doesn't ever overshoot anything. That's why they are doing great.
You basically just agreed with him.
4K will be noticeable Im assuming, but you dont necessarily need to upgrade your movie collection. You dont need to have 4K movie content to take advantage of 4K displays. This is like saying the Star Wars prequels or Avatar wont look better on 4K displays since they were shot in 2K/1080p.I'm just fucking pissed because I'd have to upgrade my movie collection again
Isn't 4K not even noticable until you hit really huge screens anyway?
Goodness gracious. There is a huge market for 4k just like there was for 1080p. Your posts just smack of I can't afford it so its not needed. Adults base their purchases on price. When these sets hit sub 4k price point they will start to move. At 2k they hit mainstream which should happen in 4 years or so. Which would be perfect since most people will be ready to upgrade their 4-7 year old HDTVs.
How?
4k lol.
Broadcast/cable/stallite: 720p/1080i
xbox 360: 720p
ps3:720p
wiiU: 720p
6 years into the mass introduction of 1080p, and outside of bluray and the long dead HDDVD format, 1080p material is pretty difficult to find.
He said if your TV is 40" to 50" movies or whatever will look perfect. Which it does, no pixel space(or i should say less), less noise, sharper etc. You then said you actually see the pixels and lower resolution on your projector, which is funny because you said the picture is superior than on your 60" TV, in turn agreeing than 1080p on small TV's look good.
Pretty much this 4k won't make any impact till it is about the same cost as a regular HDTV. There just is going to be very few sources of 4k for a very long time. Especially with streaming and digital content making head way daily. I am sure ISPs will be so willing to let people download 100-200 gig movies/TV shows for 4k TVs. People are not even willing to a premium for bluray right now.
People who are into this kind of tech forget the biggest reason HDTVs made headway. Form factor plain and simple people were more than willing to ditch those huge CRTs once prices got reasonable. They wanted thinner and larger TVs plain and simple.
It seems that the Koreans from the OLED group are afraid of the Japanese 4K group, latest news is that LG and Sammy both lost confidence in the oled tech and are looking for 4K. They finally discovered what Sony did years ago, very poor yield on big size OLEDs.
100-200gig movies? Even using existing codecs, you wouldn't expect 4k to be more than 4x 2k. With newer codecs being planned for the time 4k comes out, it'll likely be closer to only 2x or so.
I really hope the rumored 200 GB Bluray Disc is on the cards. This way a movie could clock in with 4K resolution, 3D, and 48FPS.
You think Sony is going to release a single disk with all of those features when they could sell them seperately as "special editions" and the like?
I'm not agreeing with him. A 50" 1080p TV may have good IQ but the picture is way too small, therefore it is far from a "perfect" viewing experience. Why should we just settle with small 50" TVs when 100" is so much better? We need 4K to get the full benefit of such large screens. Why are people so against technology advancing?
I'm not agreeing with him. A 50" 1080p TV may have good IQ but the picture is way too small, therefore it is far from a "perfect" viewing experience. Why should we just settle with small 50" TVs when 100" is so much better? We need 4K to get the full benefit of such large screens. Why are people so against technology advancing?
Because you don't need to live in airplane hangers to get a 100+ inch screen. My buddy use to rent a 8 ft by 9ft room. He always played games and movies on a front projector setup with a screen close to 100 inches.Most of the world's population don't live in airplane hangars.
Fucking listen. 4K will NOT greatly benefit the average person who is content with the average sized TV and average viewing distance. That is what he/she was saying.I'm not agreeing with him. A 50" 1080p TV may have good IQ but the picture is way too small, therefore it is far from a "perfect" viewing experience. Why should we just settle with small 50" TVs when 100" is so much better? We need 4K to get the full benefit of such large screens. Why are people so against technology advancing?
Fucking listen. 4K will NOT greatly benefit the average person who is content with the average sized TV and average viewing distance. That is what he/she was saying.
LOL. It's hilarious how people are saying that 4K will be huge for the industry. Some of you are falling for Sony's all brawn no brains approach.
Standards are changing. The average tv size is 3 times what it used to be. When I was 18 40" was amazing. Now 50" is average and cheap. By the time these go mainstream 80" will be a social norm and not a big deal. Also we will have 4k playback capable consoles by then in millions of homes.
Fucking listen. 4K will NOT greatly benefit the average person who is content with the average sized TV and average viewing distance. That is what he/she was saying.
Maybe it's just me... maybe I'm crazy... but I honestly can't see ever getting/enjoying a screen over 50".
This is like saying the Star Wars prequels or Avatar wont look better on 4K displays since they were shot in 2K/1080p.
Upgrade the TV size then. It doesn't have to be 4K. People don't even sit close enough to enjoy 1080p fully, let alone 4K.Standards are changing. The average tv size is 3 times what it used to be. When I was 18 40" was amazing. Now 50" is average and cheap. By the time these go mainstream 80" will be a social norm and not a big deal. Also we will have 4k playback capable consoles by then in millions of homes.
Look at the trend. What tv sizes are showing growth in a continuous manner year over year? And then compare that to the numbers of the early 2000s where most TVs sold were much smaller than today.I'm surprised no one mentioned this point until now, just from a simple search apparently large TVs (50''+) represent just a small fraction of TV sales in general:
I think Sony and the other players will find a very hard time convincing consumers once again to upgrade, specially considering that a large resolution like 4K require a large display as well to be noticeable.
I'm surprised no one mentioned this point until now, just from a simple search apparently large TVs (50''+) represent just a small fraction of TV sales in general:
I think Sony and the other players will find a very hard time convincing consumers once again to upgrade, specially considering that a large resolution like 4K require a large display as well to be noticeable.
They won't look better, that's like saying DVD's look better on huge HDTV's or older generation consoles look better on today's HDTV's, it's not possible for a lower res source to look better on a higher res screen than a lower res screen.
This Sony is not offering some fancy electronic or physical manipulation using typical "2K" panels (basically 1080p), and claiming 4K. On the contrary, Sony's flagship home cinema projector sports three genuine 4K LCoS (SXRD) panels, for true 4K resolution of 4096x2160, a tad higher than 4 times today's 1080p resolution (1920x1080). That "extra" above 4x, is thanks to a wider panel.
The benefit of the higher resolution panels is immediately noticeable on 2K [1080p] content. Sony offers Reality Creation for adjustable 2K to 4K upscaling! It's not night and day, that is, it's not as strking as viewing true 4K content, but it is definitely a real difference compared to standard 2K. There are times when the difference is dramatic.
Resolution doesn't cost money unless you're a developer who makes 2D games (where sprite quality becomes important).If 4K will have four times the pixels of full HD will that mean video game development costs on it will balloon 4 times? Or will it be more than that?
I'd like to see it mapped against average price-per-inch before drawing any conclusions. My holiday travels have been dominated by large televisions running SD content. It drives me nuts.Your chart actually shows that in the last eight years in the UK sales of 33" to 42" TVs have increased by more than eight times and sales of 43"+ TVs have increased by more than 10x. TVs smaller than 33" have gone from making up over 95% of the market to less than 65%!
Furthermore, I am sure that if we were looking at the data for the US it would be even more skewed towards bigger sizes.
Your data certainly shows that the trend is for consumers to demand ever larger TVs.
I'd like to see it mapped against average price-per-inch before drawing any conclusions. My holiday travels have been dominated by large televisions running SD content. It drives me nuts.
Resolution doesn't cost money unless you're a developer who makes 2D games (where sprite quality becomes important).
Most gaming assets are designed and constructed at very high resolution and fidelity.*cough*textures*cough*
This is incorrect. DVDs certainly look far better on HDTVs than SDTVs.
It seems that the Koreans from the OLED group are afraid of the Japanese 4K group, latest news is that LG and Sammy both lost confidence in the oled tech and are looking for 4K. They finally discovered what Sony did years ago, very poor yield on big size OLEDs.
Ahem..
http://www.displaysearchblog.com/2012/12/korean-panel-makers-change-tv-priorities-oled-vs-4kx2k/
Also... Hisense will have a 50" Ultra HDTV.
http://hdguru.com/hisense-targets-the-us-hdtv-market/8853/
O wait LG too.
http://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.php?subaction=showfull&id=1356589634
Since they are just adding "retina" levels of definition for very large screens, I'll bet in just a few years everyone will offer a 4K TV for a few grand.
Ahem..
http://www.displaysearchblog.com/2012/12/korean-panel-makers-change-tv-priorities-oled-vs-4kx2k/
Also... Hisense will have a 50" Ultra HDTV.
http://hdguru.com/hisense-targets-the-us-hdtv-market/8853/
O wait LG too.
http://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.php?subaction=showfull&id=1356589634
You're assuming all things will be equal. It's hoped that Rec 2020 will be used.100-200gig movies? Even using existing codecs, you wouldn't expect 4k to be more than 4x 2k.
As though 4k is somehow a Sony-only endeavor? lol gtfoLOL. It's hilarious how people are saying that 4K will be huge for the industry. Some of you are falling for Sony's all brawn no brains approach.
Goodness gracious. There is a huge market for 4k just like there was for 1080p. Your posts just smack of I can't afford it so its not needed. Adults base their purchases on price. When these sets hit sub 4k price point they will start to move. At 2k they hit mainstream which should happen in 4 years or so. Which would be perfect since most people will be ready to upgrade their 4-7 year old HDTVs.
What has your comment to do with what I said? They seem to say the exact same thing I said save for the hisense link.