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UHD Spec Stomps on Current Blu-ray Spec, But Will Consumers Notice? 332

An anonymous reader writes Details have emerged on the new UHD Blu-ray spec and players set to start shipping this summer. UHD promises resolutions 4X greater than Blu-ray 1080p as well as much higher data rates, enhanced color space and more audio options. But, will consumers care, and will they be willing to upgrade their HDTV's, AV Receivers, and Blu-ray players to adopt a new format whose benefits may only be realized on ultra large displays or close viewing distances? The article makes the interesting point that UHD isn't synonymous with 4K, even if both handily beat the resolution of most household displays.
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UHD Spec Stomps on Current Blu-ray Spec, But Will Consumers Notice?

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  • I won't notice (Score:5, Insightful)

    by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:34PM (#48893849)

    I don't even have a Blu-ray player. :)

    • Re:I won't notice (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Pinkfud ( 781828 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:01PM (#48894025) Homepage
      Neither will I. My eyes have gone bad with advancing age, and I can no longer see any difference between current definitions. :(
      • Re:I won't notice (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Brave Guy ( 457657 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:44PM (#48894287)

        A human adult with average vision can't distinguish anything much above current HD resolutions from normal TV viewing distances at typical physical TV screen dimensions either. This is one of the big problems all the businesses creating flashy new 4K TVs haven't quite worked out how to deal with yet.

        Meanwhile, plenty of people still have DVD players rather than Blu-Ray, because even moving to HD doesn't make much difference for a lot of material in practice, and the old "get them to buy Star Wars for the seventeenth time two step" has run out of music.

        Then you have to consider the rise of on-line sources and the generally poor experience of the physical disc systems. Most of that poor experience isn't actually because of swapping discs. It's because of all the other silly things that all legally manufactured players are required using tortured legal tricks to implement, preventing otherwise obvious improvements in competing devices such as skipping to the !~%# movie straight away.

        So personally, I'm expecting 4K and other very high resolution formats to flop outside of niche markets, like say luxury home cinema systems with a projector and a screen several metres across. Even where they do get adopted, I'm expecting the market to demand less messy distribution, which would make any sort of disc-based successor to Blu-Ray even less likely to succeed.

        • So personally, I'm expecting 4K and other very high resolution formats to flop outside of niche markets, like say luxury home cinema systems with a projector and a screen several metres across.

          I don't think so. I think it'll keep going until 72" TVs are cheap enough for the masses to own or something like that HoloLens Microsoft was talking about matures. IMO one or the other will happen by 2030, at which point it will stop at 8k (however studio masters will be at 16k so that they can downres for a sharper 8k image, similar to how present 4k is downresed from 8k for the same reason.)

          • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

            Everyone has to keep in mind that the big screen high definition display is still far, far cheaper than a picture window with a good view and it can do far more with out disrupting the insulative affect of walls by putting holes in them. So one for every room, price being the driving issue.

            Of course when it comes to content distributor, (buying the same content again and again under new marketing) and manufacturer (you must upgrade) PR=B$ and the latest double vision, the actors with botox and plastic su

        • Re:I won't notice (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Nathan Piper ( 3544235 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:21PM (#48894519)
          On the other hand, the color space of current TV grade LCDs is absolutely atrocious and any improvement is going to be noticeable.
        • I disagree. I've watched a Blu Ray played on a 50" HDTV at 1920x1080 resolution, and next to it a 50" 4K (3880xwhatever) television was playing some UHD content. The difference in definition was very easy to see from even ten feet away.

          Now, I'm perfectly happy to use $12 Blu Ray disks (6-12 months after a film comes to video) and a $300 37" HDTV for entertainment. 4K is gorgeous, but didn't buy an HDTV until my previous television was ten years old and I could get an HDTV for $300 or less. Once a 37
          • "I disagree. I've watched a Blu Ray played on a 50" HDTV at 1920x1080 resolution, and next to it a 50" 4K (3880xwhatever) television was playing some UHD content. The difference in definition was very easy to see from even ten feet away."

            On a mall, I bet.

            Maybe you are an expert and I'm wrong, but you probably were fooled to think the UHD was better by gaming the controls of both screens.

          • Re:I won't notice (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Sunday January 25, 2015 @12:26AM (#48896639)

            Well, if Sony and their idiot partners had not made such an absolute hash of the Blu ray experience by excessive DRM, offensive warnings that can't be skipped and crass shovelware loading of endless previews that are opt out (and sometimes, randomly either can't be fast forwarded or can't be skipped) and super slow clumsy content menus due to the braindamaged Java tie then consumers might actually care about the next Blu Ray standard. But Sony did make a hash of it and delivered an experience that makes you want to throw a shoe at the TV every time. The kick in the face that just keeps kicking. Sorry, no more crappy optical disks rubbing my face in whatever a content provider wants to rub my face in. Solid state, hard disk or streaming for me, Blu Ray can fuck off and die, and so can Sony.

        • Permit me to disagree. I have not so hot vision (contacts, -4.50), and, unlike many people I know, I can clearly distinguish between, say, 720p and 1080p. I just moments ago installed my new 55" 4k Vizio (P series ftw!), and the difference is remarkable. It's fairly noticeable on upscaled 1080p content, but plug in a computer and push some real 4k (read: games), and the difference is remarkable. At a viewing distance of about 10 feet, the difference in clarity is readily apparent. And I'm not alone in
        • Re:I won't notice (Score:5, Informative)

          by StarFace ( 13336 ) * on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:33PM (#48894831) Homepage

          Try VLC. It is the only thing I will use to watch DVDs these days. For one thing you can start playing the film immediately for most discs, just stick it in and load with menus skipped. For those discs that put other crap in the 1-1 position, loading to the menu means just that. No preview bullshit, no restricted navigation, no tedious animated menu effects, just straight to the navigation point, click play and the film starts without every other authoritative government's angry and unskippable piracy warnings.

      • You need some super specs then.
      • Movies have already started to skip DVD. Ishtar, for example, is on Blu-ray but not DVD. You'll notice the difference between Blu-ray and no movie at all unless perhaps you're deafblind.

        • by jd2112 ( 1535857 )

          Movies have already started to skip DVD. Ishtar, for example, is on Blu-ray but not DVD. You'll notice the difference between Blu-ray and no movie at all unless perhaps you're deafblind.

          Do you have any examples of this other than one of the biggest bombs Hollywood ever made? It probably was never released on DVD due to dismal VHS sales.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Forget the resolution. Increase the frame rate!

        Every fast action movie or sporting event is just so choppy. I want 120 frames per second.

    • So I'm supposed to by some low density read only plastic disk with a movie on it with heavy DRM. To put into a player that is beholden to the media companies who happen to have a horrid history for security.

      I'll stay with downloaded content, aside from an unlikely unrecoverable raid 6 failure they content is mine and I can do what I like with it forever. No I do not want to rent your content, I do not want to have to view it on approved displays (I'm still using a pre HDMI 1080 CRT 10+ years old). I do n

    • by Thagg ( 9904 ) <thadbeier@gmail.com> on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:06PM (#48894455) Journal

      As the article states, two of the most important changes in this standard are high dynamic range (HDR) and wider color gamut (Rec. 2020) images. I have been working on this with Dolby Laboratories for the last few years, and whenever we bring in movie directors, cinematographers, colorists, or studio executives to see our ridiculously HDR wide-color-gamut display, their jaws hit the floor. The ability to reproduce the dynamic range and color gamut of real life is breathtaking. One of the studio executives, when asked if she could see the difference said "Do I look like a potted palm?"

      You will see the difference, and you'll be able to see it from across the room. HDR and wide color gamut combined with UHD resolution is a revolution.

      I know this sounds like a sales pitch (ok, it is!) but I've been working in the film business for 30 years before I started working on this; I know what creatives want, and this is it. I spent that time working on CG visual effects, and I think that HDR will have a comparable impact on filmmaking that VFX did.

      The Dolby Cinema theaters opening in the next few months will have similar extreme dynamic range and wide color gamut. They look astonishingly better as well.

      Wait and see. It's coming, and it's not far away.

      • Will the displays calibrate themselves?, and provide some useful fudge setting for people that like their display brighter to see the details easily.
        Most people badly set their brightness or whatever it is (and they don't want me to turn it down) whereas that's really glaring to me as I'm used to deep blacks.
        If there were gamma in the TV manus instead of just "brightness" it would be a good thing already (that's what I like anyway, in small amount).
        With HDR, you'll vitally need some "smart" setting I believ

        • by Thagg ( 9904 )

          The Dolby Vision TVs will have reasonable controls to set brightness and contrast, but one of the selling points to the studios is that we will strive to maintain the artistic intent of the original. The blacks will be black, the whites will be white, and there will be an unprecedented (but realistic) amount of contrast.

          It turns out that in high dynamic range content creation, the most important thing is not that the picture be brighter overall; but that there is an increased range between midtones and hig

  • I just upgraded to an HDTV (from a mid 90s tube tv), so no.

    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      And the content on TV has progressively gotten worse since the 70's.

      70's had cheesy TV shows that you could at least smile at. The TV shows today - they are either just stupid or depressing.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:36PM (#48893863)
    The future is increasing frame rates for more realism. Unfortunately, the big manufacturers need to sell 4k televisions, and will keep pushing the dead horse of increased resolution, which is completely pointless for a massive majority of users..
    • by maccodemonkey ( 1438585 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:57PM (#48894387)

      Any TV you can buy today can do 60 fps over HDMI. The frame rate push has been done for years, the content just never showed up:

      It's also arguable if that's the future. Everyone seems pretty happy with the current refresh rates of film, and 60 fps Hobbit wasn't well received.

      • Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't the Hobbit shot at 48fps? Also, one of the reasons it wasn't well received was because people complained that it didn't feel 'cinematic,' or that it reminded them of soap operas. The ironic thing here is that the reason people thought that is that many day time tv shows ARE shot at a higher fps than the cinema standard 24. It is not arguable that the higher frame rate provides a more clear picture, and, honestly, I see this going the way of the vinyl... CDs are better
      • For me, The Hobbit wasn't well-received because 300 pages of children's book does not equal three feature length films, and stereoscopic 3D is a detraction. The higher frame rate was in the otherwise barren "plus" column.

  • Rarely works out well.

  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:39PM (#48893885) Homepage Journal

    When a slashdot submission asks a question, the answer is always no. And this case is no exception.

    UHD promises resolutions 4X greater than Blu-ray 1080p as well as much higher data rates, enhanced color space and more audio options. But, will consumers care, and will they be willing to upgrade their HDTV's, AV Receivers, and Blu-ray players

    No, no they won't. 1080p is already really good. What we will notice, however, is high-resolution monitors getting cheaper.

    • by Pulzar ( 81031 )

      No, no they won't. 1080p is already really good.

      When it comes to TVs, yes... but projectors would see a huge benefit. When you project 1080p onto a 120+" screen, things definitely start getting a bit fuzzy.

      Of course, that's a niche market, but it could be enough to drive the prices down into somewhat reasonable category. Projectors themselves have gotten cheap enough that way..

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      Not only that, but they're lying about the capabilities. It's only 2X the resolution (which is a linear measurement). That gives it 4X the pixels.
  • by umdesch4 ( 3036737 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:40PM (#48893897)
    I have a 1080p projector that I'm projecting onto a 116" screen. At 1080p, the results are acceptable to me, and it's the only video I ever look at that would really get much of a noticeable benefit from being 4K. So, when 4K projectors drop under $1600 CAD, I'll start to be interested.
    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:32PM (#48894207)
      I'm projecting a 1080p image onto a 150" screen (my wall). It's damn obvious 1080p isn't enough. From 12' away I can see the individual pixels, and the anti-aliasing is obvious on news and sports graphics. I'd say 1080p video looks about as sharp as 480i video (DVD) on a 50" screen - not very sharp at all. And I'm 45 and my prescription 2 years out of date, so it's not like my eyes are as good as they used to be. If my next eyeglass prescription is sharper, I may have to intentionally defocus the projector image slightly to mitigate the screen door effect.

      I'm seeing more and more 70"+ HDTVs for sale in stores, so I have to believe people are buying them. That's about the point when 1080p starts to become limiting [videograndpa.com] at typical living room distances (about 8 ft between sofa and TV). Theoretical max for a room with 8' ceilings is just shy of 200 inches at 16:9, so there's still a lot of room for TVs to potentially grow. Add in more cameras capable of recording 4k, and 4k is going to gain traction in the next 5-10 years whether you want it or not. I've already decided that when the bulb on my current projector deteriorates, I'm just going to replace it with a 4k projector.
      • by BitZtream ( 692029 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @10:08PM (#48896129)

        You're doing it completely wrong. You need to get a clue about viewing distance and the ratio between display size and it.

        You're one of those guys who thinks he has this kick ass awesome setup because you made it bigger, but really, you just made it shittier.

        You should at least get the most basic of clues from wikipedia:
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O... [wikipedia.org]

        At no point should your display be larger than the distance you're viewing it from, thats just retarded.

  • Too late! (Score:5, Funny)

    by namgge ( 777284 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:43PM (#48893917)
    Anybody able to afford this upgrade is probably too old to be have eyesight good enough to see it.
    • Re:Too late! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:59PM (#48894003) Homepage

      Man, does that hurt. I'm afraid you're right to a very large extent. I could certainly upgrade from a 42" 1080 p screen, but unless I sit really close with my glasses on, it doesn't make much difference.

      The nieces and nephews think the TV is something akin to a slide rule - an interesting historical object of little daily import. If it doesn't go on the laptop screen or the phone, it doesn't get watched.

      Except for the Star Wars laser disks but that's another sad tech story.....

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
        I got one of the last active-glasses 3D TVs from LG. A 55" 720p plasma. They canceled the line, and went to RealD, for cheaper glasses, and when you buy one of the last of a line of 3D TVs, with no glasses available in plasma 720p (hadn't been made for months, not in stock in any official dealers), you pay about 1/4 list price (when the list was already discounted for clearance). I couldn't have gotten a better TC for twice the price at the time.

        And I'm constantly asked if my 720p is a 4k. A good recei
  • Nope (Score:5, Insightful)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:46PM (#48893949)

    >"But, will consumers care, and will they be willing to upgrade their HDTV's, AV Receivers, and Blu-ray players to adopt a new format whose benefits may only be realized on ultra large displays or close viewing distances?"

    Nope

    4K is such a crazy marketing gimmick. Most of the population can already barely tell the difference between a quality DVD upscale and a Bluray at any reasonable size or distance. The manufacturers *want* to keep making everything obsolete so people "have" to keep buying new stuff, and re-buying their content over and over.

    • Reminds me of how VGA could readily handle higher resolutions than modern displays, component video even better, but everything had to be digital so they could sneak in their DRM.

  • Uh...no (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Radical Moderate ( 563286 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:48PM (#48893951)
    I miss the days of NTSC, a standard that lasted half a lifetime. This upgrade-your-TV-every-6 months crap is getting old. And get off my lawn.
    • I miss the days of NTSC, a standard that lasted half a lifetime. This upgrade-your-TV-every-6 months crap is getting old. And get off my lawn.

      Some of us grew up with PAL, which made HD even less of a priority.

      Quite frankly 720 or compressed-to-shreds 1080i isn't worth the effort c.f. PAL, and although proper 1080p from BluRay is rather more impressive, I can't say it has spoiled me for anything less - a PAL DVD on a ~40" HD screen with upsampling doesn't exactly make you want to claw your eyes out.

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
        PAL/NTSC doesn't really exist in DVDs (yes, I know people will argue that, but I can put any DVD from any region, NTSC or PAL into my old DVD player and it'll output what NTSC or PAL based on a software switch). That's a function of the player. And my best results in my current player come from having the player output at 1080p, and have my receiver downscale to 720p. Showing a DVD on 720p is much better than broadcast 1080p on a 1080p TV.
        • PAL/NTSC doesn't really exist in DVDs (yes, I know people will argue that, but I can put any DVD from any region, NTSC or PAL into my old DVD player and it'll output what NTSC or PAL based on a software switch).

          Not all DVD players can do that. I own a copy of Wobbl and Bob, which is "region: all" and encoded in 576i/50. I've owned three "consumer" DVD players: an Apex, a PlayStation 2 slim (NTSC U/C), and a Magnavox, all region 1. Of the three, only the Apex would play it. The PS2 froze on a black screen with an error message "TV system doesn't match", and the Magnavox displayed a similar message with different wording.

          • by AK Marc ( 707885 )

            "TV system doesn't match"

            Were you going RCA video out? HDMI is 2-way, and the player and monitor negotiate. But most of the other video standards, like RCA, composite, S-video and such are 1-way. It would be *impossible* for the system to "know" that the TV doesn't match. I found a "cheap" DVD player with a PAL/NTSC output switch, and it was (naturally) region free. It's never had a problem playing anything on everything. Same as playing a DVD on a computer. I've never had any DVD played on a computer (or by association, out

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Just because Intel releases a 100 MHz faster CPU you don't have to buy it, you know. And TVs get incremental upgrades, but honestly how many generations of mainstream media has there been? VHS (1973), DVD (1995), BluRay (2006) and this will be the fourth. Does it really kill you that something better comes along once a decade? Sure, marketers will always tell you that you need something new, that's not just in their job description that is their job description. I like the state of the art moving forward, w

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        The idea that the markets for every other concievable consumer product should be turned into the PC upgrade treadmill from the 90s is hardly a selling point.

        That bullsh*t isn't even tolerable on PCs now anymore.

        People got tired of it. I doubt anyone wants a return of that crap.

        Much like the music industry, video needs format churn to fuel unsustainable growth.

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      I have a 4 year old TV (5 if you count the TV model years). It's a 55" 720p plasma. I'm still constantly asked by people if it's a 4k. People buying and upgrading crap yearly are doing it wrong. The kids TV is a 7 year old 46" 1080p LCD. The new one wasn't an "upgrade" but a new TV to fill a new space in a new house with a larger TV.
  • I was one of the early (and later) adopters of HDTV. I've currently got a ~5 year old Pioneer Plasma (Kuro baby!) that does 1080p and, frankly, I'm fine with it. I've seen the 4K TVs and the additional resolution, to my eyes, doesn't seem to do much for the picture. I'm sure there's more detail there. I had the fortune of seeing the Hobbit in both the new HiDef projection screen (with LCD style panning, oooh) and in an IMAX theater back to back and I was amazed at how much more sharper and detailed the

  • by watermark ( 913726 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @02:54PM (#48893981)

    And again, my media PC combined with torrents is still better. It can already play 4k videos. Don't have to buy any new hardware, don't have to re-buy movies I've already bought. Don't have to worry about the kids breaking the disk. Don't have to worry if that disk you bought in Europe will work back in the States. DVDs were a large upgrade from VHS, the next step is better digital distribution. Blue-ray and UHD are just stepping stones to them realizing physical media is dead.

    Give me a digital distribution system that will work even if the company goes out of business. One that I allows me to backup the media. One that allows for offline storage so I can watch when I don't have internet. One that works on all platforms. One that I can re-download the file if I do lose it. The only thing that satisfies all of that is DRM free files. Until they provide that, torrents will still win.

  • by gorehog ( 534288 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:02PM (#48894027)

    Mostly people don't bother with all this stuff to start with, and the manufacturers are so busy trying to sell new TV's that they don't even bother to build good one to begin with.

    For instance, I just set up a Sonos 5.1 surround system. During the process I checked compatibility with my TV and I found this list of televisions that don't pass 5.1 surround data out the TOSLINK port under various conditons: https://sonos.custhelp.com/app... [custhelp.com] . Some only pass it from specific sources and some don't pass it at all. I'm lucky, my TV works under all conditions. Never mind problems with HDMI/HDCP/CEC/ARC compatibility.

    I don't care about increased resolution because I can't be sure that the next TV I'll buy will meet my minimum specs. Purchasing is a gamble these days and once you engineer a working solution why would you upgrade? I didn't jump on the 3D idiocy and I'll bet you didn't either. Even if you have a 3D TV did you buy extra, or any glasses for it?

    The producers, in a genius move enabled by "vertical integration", will add a new broadcast or regional flag or change an encryption key or some shit and stop making media in the old format. People will run like lemmings to Walget or TarMart to buy new equipment because the old stuff has been artificailly obsoleted. It's enough to make me stop watching altogether. Good luck selling your advertising time when no one gives a shit assholes.

    • I have a 10+ year old 1080 flat CRT no HDCP support hell it's got DVI not HDMI. Screen looks beautiful the whole were going to obsolete your gear because you might pirate our content BS was the last straw for me. The content got pirated anyways and pirated content plays just fine on my "ancient" TV, flankly it works better than the store content no unskippable 30 minutes of ad's and I can trans-code it for any device I care to.

  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:21PM (#48894133) Homepage

    The new spec also brings HFR (up to 60 fps, probably), wider colors (Rec. 2020), more accurate colors (10-bit seems to go mainstream) as well as double resolution. But hey yes, a BluRay looks pretty sweet already. In any case, it doesn't hurt unlike 3D that some - me included - just doesn't like. I just checked my local version of pricewatch and of 646 TV models for sale 102 now feature UHD. They even sell 40" UHD TVs for $500 now, which makes no sense at all and all this with Netflix being just about the only source of non-upscale UHD content. So I think it's beyond a doubt that mainstream TVs will go there eventually.

    Besides, the trend is only bigger TVs. When I grew up we had a 20-something inch TV, now I have a 60" TV. When prices go down, sizes go up. It won't be quick and it's not urgent at all, but just like FullHD settled in - there were a lot of naysayers then too - UHD will too. It's not like SACD and DVD Audio where people listen on the go and want playlists, watching movies/series is still primarily a living room couch activity where you sit down to watch one for 40 mins - 3 hours.

    • But the thing that really kills any interest from me is that the article author expects that will continue to use 4:2:0 Chroma Subsampling. That to me makes the new increased colorspace worthless, as you won't actually be able to see any of it (small chroma resolution).

      I remember being astounded that the original Blu-Ray spec carried-over the 4:2:0 from DVD, and once-again this mess will be propagated further. The smart move would be an upgrade to 4:2:2, which is supported by many high-end camera formats,

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        A 2160p picture with 4:2:0 chroma already contains as much chroma detail as a 1080p picture with 4:4:4 chroma.

  • by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:35PM (#48894219)

    Will the standard contain provisions for unskippable items? Then I won't buy an UHD player.

  • not new disk player that will require the purchase of special 4K edition of Ernest Goes To Jail. Almost everybody wants easy access to all entertainment media yet these media douche bags refuse to do it.

    Mr CEO I've got an awesome idea that will let every one around the world get access to all movies so cheap they won't care if they lose them and have to re buy them 10 times over. We'll be riiiiiich!!!

    No no jr tech guy lets lock up the distribution, only make certain media available to certain regions of the

  • Ghostbusters 4K (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    The original Ghostbusters film from years back recently had a '4K' remaster released in a 1080P Bluray edition. The film had no more detail than a good DVD version, because the 'original' negative was obviously in a horrid state, and the film had been shot mostly partially out of focus. The 4K did wonders for the GRAIN, though.

    4K is great for nature documentaries. Everything else, less so. 4K tears apart the compromises in CGI and VFX, for instance, and the cost of improving the production so it appears 'pe

  • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:45PM (#48894295) Journal
    ... I've often thought "I wish the content/story were better", but never "I need to see more pores".
  • I want large-data formats to succeed because I want my "boxed sets" to take up less shelf space. Give me an entire season at as-broadcast resolution on a single disk (13 episodes of HD or 3-4 times that for a very-good-quality digitization of old stuff that only exists on broadcast-quality NTSC tapes would be nice), including bonus material, and I'll be happier than if the large disks are used only for higher-definition content. My eyes aren't what they once were and neither are my ears.

    For the same reaso

  • by LamaBrew ( 3993271 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @03:53PM (#48894349)

    The content providers have threatened to require the new HDCP 2.x DRM system on the HDMI outputs instead of the existing HDCP 1.x. HDCP 2.x has required all of the IC providers to design new chips, and the standard is much more restrictive and much more fragile than the existing HDCP 1.x.

    HDCP 1.x took several generations of product to get to function ( most people's problems with HDMI in the first few years was due to the HDCP DRM failing, not HDMI, which only specs how to send data).

    Given the past history of HDCP it could be years before you can reasonably expect multiple pieces of consumer electronics from different vendors to play together well. I'm sure the message "HDCP violation" will look much nicer in 4K.

  • Sony used to be ultra-proprietary, but they made up for it with very high quality and original stuff. Now SONY is still ultra-proprietary, but their stuff is meh.

    Up with the new standard!

  • we will buy anything. Every time we come close to market saturation in the latest Video display resolution and the accompanying disc/digital library, they come out with something new...that we all just have to own. I once worked in R&D for a global consumer electronics company...this has all been planned out, decades in advance because...suckers!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 24, 2015 @04:34PM (#48894583)

    As an audio-visuophile, all I can say is, seriously, just like the megapixel war in digital cameras, we're now having a megapixel war in TVs. But, what most people realize is that these new, super high resolutions are useless to most people, because while they may have the 4K TV, all of the equipment around it fails to deliver the content to the TV properly.

    Cables are a simple example of this. Your run of the mill $10 HDMI cable from Walmart is not going to faithfully reproduce the digital signal between a UHD Bluray player and a 4K TV. No oxygen-free copper. No gold plating (or maybe just a few microinches of it). No super high twists per inch. The bits are just going to get fuzzy between the source and the TV and this makes it impossible to reproduce 4K content accurately.

    Even more jitter and fuzz is introduced by poor power conditioning, inadequate and noisy power cables, and lack of solar irradiance dampers (lab tests have shown that even having the sun shine on equipment introduces noise and inaccurate pixels).

    It's nearly impossible for a home A/V setup consisting of crap you get from Walmart or Bestbuy to do a good job of presenting UHD or 4K content in the truest, deepest form and with the most clarity.

  • by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @11:20PM (#48896397)

    The new format is on a harddrive. It is data. Can we be done with these discs? Just period.

    What would it cost to put the data on a thumb drive instead of a disc? It doesn't need more space then the movie takes up and it doesn't need to be writable. What would it cost to make a crap thumb drive with the movie on it that wasn't even writable?

    Just go with that. We're not going back to the dvd collection days. That's through.

  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @11:46PM (#48896495)

    I hear the ultra-fucking-high-def (UFHD) standard will be out in 5 years. I'll wait to upgrade my TVs and players when they support that standard. That way I can watch Ultraporn

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Sunday January 25, 2015 @12:38AM (#48896665)
    Never, ever be the first person to volunteer to be the guinea pig for new tech. Especially expensive or niche tech. ( cough 3D cough ) You'll regret it when, a year later, you can buy the same gear at a fraction of the cost you spent to be " first ". Assuming they haven't trashed the standard and are moving onto another one.

    With a few exceptions, what is even ON TV these days that is worth spending $$$$ on to upgrade all your gear every year or so ? I bought all my favorite movies that I wanted when we switched from VHS to DVD. I didn't even bother when Blu-Ray happened. ( Remember Blu-Ray hardware prices first year or two ? LOL What are they now ? ) Will likely donate the whole collection as I watch the new standards come and go. I don't -think- you'll be streaming UHD or 4K anytime soon as we can barely get decent HD quality across the networks due to compression and bickering over bandwidth consumption. It will only get worse for the newer formats I think. ( US markets only, you folks overseas with enviable high speed symmetric bandwidth, ymmv )

    Dunno about you all, but I'm just about done with TV. When the one we have dies, I'll just put the aquarium in its place and be done with it.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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