8K TVs Are Coming, But Don't Buy the Hype (engadget.com) 299
If the 8,294,400 pixels of resolution on an Ultra High Definition television just don't seem to convey enough detail, fear not: The electronics industry has heard your cry. From a report: Even as UHD TVs, often called 4K TVs for their nearly 4,000 pixels of horizontal resolution, approach half of display shipments in the U.S., set manufacturers have been stepping up their demos of 8K sets that, with their 7680-by-4320 resolution, pack in a full 33,177,600 pixels. And Sharp is now expanding its distribution of one such set, the 70-inch LV-70X500E. Following its October debut in China and subsequent arrivals in Japan and Taiwan, this 8K display will go on sale across Europe at the end of April for about $13,800 at current exchange rates. That, apparently, is supposed to be a reasonable price for a set that supports a video format that offers next to nothing to watch, that can't be streamed on most broadband connections or fit onto Blu-ray discs and which can't even be properly appreciated unless you get a set too big to fit in many living rooms.
[...] The highlights reel playing on a demo unit of Sharp's 8K set required 300 megabits per second of bandwidth to stream, said Adrian Wysocki, group product manager at UMC, the Sharp-owned firm that builds TVs in Poland for the company. He suggested in a conversation Friday that more efficient formats could cut that to 100 Mbps. Only 23.2% of U.S. fixed-broadband connections hit that speed at the end of 2016, according to to the Federal Communications Commission's latest report on internet access services.
[...] The highlights reel playing on a demo unit of Sharp's 8K set required 300 megabits per second of bandwidth to stream, said Adrian Wysocki, group product manager at UMC, the Sharp-owned firm that builds TVs in Poland for the company. He suggested in a conversation Friday that more efficient formats could cut that to 100 Mbps. Only 23.2% of U.S. fixed-broadband connections hit that speed at the end of 2016, according to to the Federal Communications Commission's latest report on internet access services.
I want these for pictures (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure it's going to be a while before you see much 8k VIDEO content...
But what the naysayers are ignore is how awesome these will be for images.
Also a nice side effect of putting on 8K displays, is it drives the cots of 4k displays even cheaper in the meantime.
Re:I want these for pictures (Score:5, Insightful)
Also a nice side effect of putting on 8K displays, is it drives the cots of 4k displays even cheaper in the meantime.
And more specifically, it's the same manufacturing needed to make smaller 4K displays. This is just trying to monetize the fact that smaller 4K panels are being manufactured with fewer flaws.
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They're already small enough. But to do that, you need higher pixel density than you need in a 50" 4K screen. That's enough pixel density to make a 10" 8K screen. a 1080p smartphone screen is enough pixel density for a large 8K TV.
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This is nothing to do with competition. This is to do with mature manufacturing techniques with low defect rates and existing manufacturing facilities. That same pixel density when scaled to larger panels makes higher resolution screens. The prices are already down, but this is another way to monetize existing manufacturing facilities. The incremental cost to manufacture these as a new product line is very low compared to creating something new.
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Honestly, if ten hours of work at $10/hr makes a table, you can't continue supplying tables for less than $100 each--regardless of competition. Find a way to make a table in five hours of work and now it's a $50 table
I thought they just told people who made $10/hr they now make $5/hr, instant $50 table.
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Yeah, but then you have to also provide an extra $5/hr of welfare, which has to be produced, which means somebody has to get paid, which means taxes and transfers, and you're back where you started. Welfare keeps an economy stable and maximizes economic wealth (when implemented properly), but it doesn't magic things out of the ether any more than a capacitor is a magical source of electricity from nowhere.
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Sure it's going to be a while before you see much 8k VIDEO content...
But what the naysayers are ignore is how awesome these will be for images.
Also a nice side effect of putting on 8K displays, is it drives the cots of 4k displays even cheaper in the meantime.
As is the way of every new hotness. It drives the cost of the old busted down. 8k is the new hotness. 4k is the old busted. The author must have some vested interest in an older technology. Maybe he bought his first 4k tv last weekend and is bitter?
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But what the naysayers are ignore is how awesome these will be for images
I can now display images that are close to 100% zoom from my DSLR (36MP) or similar effective resolution of 35mm film scans. These silly TV resolutions however do seem like the ever increasing pixel counts on point and shoot and cell phone cameras though. It is somethign that is simple to understand and easy to market to but is something that is likely falling into more hype than anything else.
8K is still not 100% of higher end cameras (Score:2)
I can now display images that are close to 100% zoom from my DSLR (36MP) or similar effective resolution of 35mm film scans.
8k (7680x432) resolution is still slightly below that at 33.2 megapixels, and because these would be widescreen probably a bit less as the image would either have dead space to either side or be cropped to fill, meaning not nearly 100%. For a higher end 50MP camera you are even further from 100% viewing.
Also not factoring in things like panoramic and the like even from smartphones whi
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...and computers (Score:3)
Heck, it'd make for an awesome computer screen too. Might be a bit much for most current gaming hardware to drive, but by the time it becomes mainstream I doubt that'll be a problem. In the meantime, it means smoother fonts and crisper images. I'm right at the cusp of upgrading to 4k - they're finally making affordable 40" 4k TVs (about the largest screen I'd want at arm's length), I'm just waiting for the improvements to slow enough that I don't get buyer's remorse right away as next month's models sign
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4K monitors are not as great as you think they are. I upgraded to a samsung 28" monitor a year ago thinking the same thing. To actually be able to see anything I had to increase the UI to 150% of normal. So basically I had the same amount of deskspace just on a bigger monitor.
It does pretty good when I need to put a whole page of text on a screen but I imagine that could be done on a standard HD 28" screen.
Don't get me wrong, if you can get one get it. It does help with somethings. Just don't thin
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It makes fonts a lot more readable, especially at small sizes. How valuable is even just a 10% increase in text scanning speed?
It also makes word processors / DTP look much better because the on screen kerning looks right at 4k.
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It's a 33 megapixel display. While there certainly are professional applications for displays of that pixel count, professionals already have ways of dealing with large numbers of pixels (e.g. zooming in, which in professional workflows would almost certainly remain the preferred way of interacting with images, since they need to be able to see what they're doing), whereas they don't have a great means for dealing with poor color accuracy if the display lacks good color reproduction, which is likely to be t
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These will be great for computer monitors. CAD will look fantastic.
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This always takes me back to being a young fellow, looking wistfully at Tektronix graphics terminal ads...Someday I would own that good a screen, now I throw them away.
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Sure it's going to be a while before you see much 8k VIDEO content...
But what the naysayers are ignore is how awesome these will be for images.
Also a nice side effect of putting on 8K displays, is it drives the cots of 4k displays even cheaper in the meantime.
Yep, if they get these out, I may finally see a 26" 4k monitor at a price I'm willing to spend. Yay!
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8k are going to be amazing as monitors, but for TVs I do not quite see the appeal. Sure, it may be so cheap that you just get it, a bit like 4k now.
But for now, an 8k TV has the same amount as 4 4k TV, but it costs 40 times as much. Something does not quite add up.
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> 60Hz
rather have 2k at 144 than 8k at 60.
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144 isn't divisible by 60, so it's not going to be useful for most interlaced content. Without variable refresh, 240Hz would be the best compromise, though a true 120Hz would be good enough for anything but 48fps (Hobbit, next Avatar) content.
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120 Hz is the correct choice.
48 FPS films can fuck off. Either stay with 24 or move to 60. You could even move to 30 for a middle ground if you wanted. But none of this 48 bullshit. We're all digital projection and mastering now anyway, and 3D is dead so we don't have to worry about that eating half the framerate.
Thankfully, the only 48 FPS films that I know of have been pure trash. TVs should start adopting adaptive framerate (Thanks to AMD / Freesync) soon, so this won't really matter as long as the
8K, lucky to get 1080p! (Score:2)
The sad part about these new 8K TVs is they cost more than some small cars or a used car and there's virtually no content that could drive something this powerful short of a very powerful computer. Better than 1080p is a rare find in most digital TV broadcasts, 1080i or 720p is more typical. Definately not there yet.
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I can see 8K 70" HDTV costing $999 shipped in 2-5 years, and I can see Netflix begin shooting their premium content in 8K in the next year, and transition everything from 4K to 8K within the next 3-5. It will happen. They can always downscale the content to fit your device.
All of Netflix's original content (which is a substantial chunk now) has been shot in 4K since about 2013. As computing, storage, editing resources improve it's not unreasonable to see things shot in 8K. Most everything we watch t
Of unicorns and compression rates (Score:2)
The highlights reel playing on a demo unit of Sharp's 8K set required 300 megabits per second of bandwidth to stream, said Adrian Wysocki, group product manager at UMC, the Sharp-owned firm that builds TVs in Poland for the company. He suggested in a conversation Friday that more efficient formats could cut that to 100 Mbps.
I'd love to hear how they're going to cut stream bandwidth by 2/3 without nullifying whatever incremental visual experience 8k is supposed to give you.
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That 300Mbps would be roughly at the same quality as 4K Blu-Ray but with the 4-fold resolution and bandwidth increase.
Streaming 4K content isn't nearly as pristine and runs between 15-25Mbps. Quadrupling that would be around the 100Mbps mark. But really, HEVC is more efficient as resolution increases, so it might actually look better than current 4K at 4 times the size. On the other hand, if 8K ever makes it to cable/satellite TV expect it to still look worse than Blu-Ray quality (most HD content is wors
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Let me email you a precalculus textbook...
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Probably just switching from a poor compression system like MPEG to HVC. They could also use a wavelet system like JP2k to get a lot more out of it than whatever they are using.
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Is there a limit? (Score:2)
These are all temporary problems — including even the living room sizes.
But the human eye has its limits too. What's the actual N, beyond which we, the humans — even those with the sharpest eyes — can no longer distinguish between N and 2N pixels per inch?
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> What's the actual N, beyond which we, the humans -- even those with the
> sharpest eyes -- can no longer distinguish between N and 2N pixels per inch?
Luckily, that math has been done.
https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]
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You link to recommended viewing distances, not picture-resolutions. If you meant a particular article, you should've dispensed with the sarcasm, and linked to it directly.
Re:Is there a limit? (Score:5, Informative)
> But the human eye has its limits too. What's the actual N, beyond which we, the humans -- even those with the sharpest eyes -- can no longer distinguish between N and 2N pixels per inch?
The TL:DR; version is: Use a 4K distance calculator
* Distance Graph [rtings.com] (PNG)
* Size to Distance Calculator [rtings.com]
The Long version: It's complicated
From a well known and respected Photography:
http://clarkvision.com/imagede... [clarkvision.com]
But if we do the math ...
Another calculation estimates around ~2200 dpi.
http://wolfcrow.com/blog/notes... [wolfcrow.com]
But since we don't view things from 4 inches away ...
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It depends on distance. The larger the screen and resolution, the further the optimal viewing distance. Thus increasing the screen size and keeping your couch as close to the TV requires more pixel density. At the same time, your frame of vision cannot include the full TV, so you need a further viewing distance for a larger screen.
SD was optimal for screens smaller than the viewing frame. HD and 4K takes us into screens the size of or larger than the viewing frame--it's higher resolution than the real
Oh c'mon! 8K on a phone will be so cool! (Score:2)
This is just the beginning.. Watch for 128K [quora.com]
A new sensory experience (Score:3)
I'll hold out until TVs have Smell-o-vision®
You need gold plated monster cables for it (Score:3)
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The HDMI 2.1 spec offers 48Gbps of bandwidth and really, the increase is more about EMI suppression than it is about conductivity. Maximum cable length will take a hit, but otherwise it's nothing crazy.
Can you see a pixel anyway? (Score:2)
At these resolutions you have to be within about 2 feet of the screen to resolve a pixel according to my very quick calculations. (Check my calculations someone.)
That is extra resolution you probably do not need.
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You can perceive sharpness and detail without seeing a pixel. I couldn't see pixels on my 1080p monitor, but I can still fit a lot more text on my 4K screen without it becoming hard to read. It's true that these will be a lot more useful for information display and non-cinematic content.
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Google for hdtv resolution chart .
The general math seems to hold up, most people sit about 12' away from their tv (average width of an apartment living room), at that distance 8K becomes economically reasonable when buying a 65" TV.
At that size Right now you can buy a 65" 4K brand name flatscreen on amazon for $999 shipped. 65" 4K is about the upper limit before you begin to lose visible "sharpness". Some might say that 65" is "too big" but we're not especially big consumers of TV (10 hou
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It's for the future, not today. (Score:4, Informative)
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I think 4K had a lot more going for it though because cinemas use DCI 4K so ~4K masters exist. Also they threw in Rec. 2020, 10 bit color and HDR into the 4K BluRay standard all of which improve the image considerably. It's hard to see anything else they got left to throw in for 8K except maybe finally standardizing the HDR encoding. And if it's good enough for the whole wall at the cinema, I sorta don't see home users crying for 8K. In fact I did some tests by down-scaling and up-scaling images on my 4K mo
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Have you considered decaf? Not everyone has the bandwidth (or lack of data caps) to streak 4k from Netflix, either. It doesn't have to be for everyone. Besides, higher def content would be a way to bring back physical media, though of course you'd need something faster than blue ray.
Higher resolution leads to holographic TVs (Score:5, Interesting)
A hologram works by using photographic film capable of photographing the actual light waves. Once we have resolutions better than light's wavelength, we can have holographic TV.
Could be worse (Score:2)
Great, now you can count the (Score:2)
hairs on her ... thing.
Care less about resolution. More about gamut. (Score:5, Informative)
8K broadcast standards use Rec 2020, which has a much wider gamut and can therefor show colors that most TVs these days can't. Rec 2020 is even wider than the DCI-P3 that many high-end monitors benchmark against these days.
Rec 2020 also defines a larger bit depth: 10 or 12 bits per component rather than 8. This is partly to support the wider gamut, but it'll also help everything else by allowing much better gradients.
Even if you don't have an 8K TV, ones that use HDR10 and Dolby Vision will benefit: both of these standards use the Rec 2020 gamut. So... bring on the 8K revolution. I want better browns.
Much better than B&W 480i but content? (Score:2)
I have a zillion more channels than back in the Cro-Magnon days but lately there hasn't been much programs that make me compelling to watch them. I don't know if it's me (i.e. they say when you are old you have seen all the old movies and all the old reruns). IEEE Broadcast Techology Society had article mentioning a three-legged stool. Equipment to send TV, equipment to receive it, content that is delivered. Eliminate any one of these three, the stool collapses. I jumped over to the BTS website, some inter
Desktop Grids (Score:2)
Now we need grids on desktops. As a TV 8k is just a pissing contest, you'd have to be within a few feet to notice any difference. But as a computer monitor having an 8k monitor would be like have 8 1080p monitors in a 2x4 grid. I worked for years with my desktop setup with 4 1080p's setup with one center, one left, one right, and one above; like the tetris piece. It worked very well.
The problem is that every window would be free floating and that would be time consuming to manage. I'd be nice to be able to
4K in Movie Theaters (Score:2)
Most movie theaters now use digital projectors, and those are typically either 2K or 4K. Even IMAX digital is 2K or 4K. I don't usually hear people complaining about the resolution in theaters, so I have trouble seeing how going to 8K will improve the home experience.
How about an 8K projector? (Score:2)
All those extra pixels will go to waste on such a tiny little "big" screen TV...... On the other hand, imagine how cool 8K
would look projected onto a 400-inch wide x 300-inch high rectangle on the wall.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
If you don't know you need it then you don't. (Score:2)
This is for early adopters and content creators. Compression formats are not linear. You can get some extra contrast from existing films on such a display. If your a content creator then you want to see how a particular compression format and it's options will display on future TV's. You want to be able to see artifacts. You might not be able to detect the difference between two sets of options unless you see compare them at a higher resolution. Furthermore displays like this are very useful for medical ima
Looking forward to it. (Score:2)
Maybe if the resolutions keep running away from bandwidth rates we could have one or hopefully two changes in the market.
The first is do away with streaming only. Fine keep your copy protect nonsense, but let me download the content or at least buffer it to watch at my leisure on any device. I get tired of not being able to watch anything if the network is being flaky.
The obvious second item is no more excuses, but GB connections should be basic service not something w
Funny as in ha ha. (Score:2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
More is better. You may not appreciate it but your grandkids will love that 400" 8K "cheep" wall display you get them for Christmas in 2028 to play their games on.
100% bullshit (Score:2)
8K TVs are 100% marketing bullshit.
Your eyes and your brain will not allow you to tell the difference between that and 1080 when the picture is moving.
The TV industry needs something to sell to suckers. 3D TV is dead, Smart TVs are dead, Curved screens are dead, roll out the next marketing wankfest.
This is no better than an "Eat all you want" restaurant saying you can now "Eat Twice as much"
8k is the new 4k (Score:2)
"...a video format that offers next to nothing to watch, that can't be streamed on most broadband connections or fit onto ... discs and which can't even be properly appreciated unless you get a set too big to fit in many living rooms."
I'm pretty sure we said the exact same things about 4k and 1080p screens...
Meh (Score:4, Funny)
I'm going to wait for the 16K screens to come out. I calculate that will finally be enough pixels to make "The Emoji Movie" watchable.
Never going to be useful (Score:3)
There's never going to be TVs big enough *and* cheap enough for the home to actually make good use of 4k, and 8k TV will never be useful in the home, period. You'll need way too big of a TV, and that'll never happen.
https://blogs-images.forbes.co... [forbes.com]
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doesn't deserve to own one. Turn in your man card immediately.
Anyone who doesn't understand why you shouldn't buy an 8K TV at this time should turn in their brain immediately. Seriously, some broadcast TV signals are not even in 1080p much less 4K. UltraHD Blurays only get up to 4K and you can't get it for every title. Eventually people might get 8K but only after there is considerable content and broadband that can handle it is ubiquitous. I'm going to guess maybe 10 years from now would 8K be worth it.
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Unless you're purchasing an extremely large TV and viewing it from a pretty close distance, 8K TVs will never be worth it, because you won't even see the difference.
It might eventually become mainstream simply due to manufacturing ease of only supporting a single resolution, similar to how almost all new TVs are 4K, even small ones. But I'm still not certain 8K will really ever take hold. I think 4K may end up becoming that ubiquitous "good enough" point beyond which remains only niche products.
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8K hits the value curve around the 65" display size @ 12 ft. Most people view their TV 10-12 ft away, and 65" TV are becoming increasingly more common. You can get quality name brand 4K 65" shipped to your house for $999 online these days.
8K (or maybe settle for 6K?) will certainly be worth it, but 16K is actually ludicrous mode. 8K is probably the upper limit, whereas 4K is merely "really good".
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Unless you're purchasing an extremely large TV and viewing it from a pretty close distance, 4K TVs will never be worth it, because you won't even see the difference.
It might eventually become mainstream simply due to manufacturing ease of only supporting a single resolution, similar to how almost all new TVs are 1080p, even small ones. But I'm still not certain 4K will really ever take hold. I think 1080p may end up becoming that ubiquitous "good enough" point beyond which remains only niche products.
You were saying?
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Relevant Futurama:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
There's also the one with the tattoo that we can't see because of our low resolution.
Re:Anyone that doesn't understand why you'd want o (Score:4, Funny)
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Beyond resolution I expect the UHD TV look better, just because of newer displaying technologies. Brigher OLED, better angles on LCD.
The color contrast on a 1080 OLED can give an over all better experience then a LCD 4k monitor.
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It used to be true that people would purchase a television and keep it until it broke down 10, 15, 20 years later - then they'd buy another one.
Now these companies are trying to get us to buy new TVs as often as we buy new phones.
I've got a 1080P LG television we bought 2012-ish. I don't care if the new TVs are somehow "better" than the one I've got - mine works fine and the display looks good. I'm likely keeping it for as long as it continues to function.
Now, kindly remove yourself from my lawn.
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I'm pretty much the same, except that my 4K OLED kicks the shit out of my 1080p IPS for all other aspects of image quality, not just resolution. So even when I'm half asleep at the back of the room lying on the couch without glasses, the 4K OLED is miles better.
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OLED displays have fantastic color reproduction. Too bad they also have durability issues.
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Its not just the screen being high resolution that is interesting, but the push in the video cards to be able to display those resolutions.
I'm holding out for wall sized touch screen monitors where 8K would be very handy.
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No doubt, if you press your nose to the screen you can see the difference. 8K is really a theater projector standard: in order to see the difference between 4K and 8K, the screen will more than fill your field of color vision. If you're sitting closer than most people find comfortable, such as the front row of a movie theater, or 5 feet from a screen with a diagonal larger than that, then you'll see the difference.
At a common viewing distance for a given screen size, you can't see the difference, but that
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I'm not certain if I can tell 4K from 1080p, but I can definitely tell UHD from HD. I only mention this because the two seem to frequently be paired together.
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Keep it. I have a 4K monitor for gaming, but there are very few videos exist at 4K that make me go wow. There are a few, mostly nature documentaries that will do it. I have yet to see a 4K movie worth the extra cost.
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You have to goto the real cheapies, but they're readily available.
The problem with the super cheaps is the quality control. You might need two or three before you find a good one, the 'name brands' aren't much better.
I paid $300 for a 55, It's OK. Speakers do _suck_, but that's long covered. You can't find a (dumb or not) 1080 for less.
Re:Meh. (Score:4)
Very hard? I would almost say impossible. I've actually been pricing UHD tv's for the greater part of a year now. One of the requirements is I want a dumb one. But there are none to be had.
My current tv is a 6 year old visio. It started life as a smart tv then gradually all the apps stopped working and where never updated. I said "fuck it" and bought a ruko.
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Super cheapies. Don't let the bad reviews scare you. I just paid $300 for a 55 sceptre dumb 4k TV, Walmart online only.
It's OK, the name brands aren't better at the economy end and are all 'smart' only, which makes them worse.
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I get that you'd prefer a display rather than a smart TV (and they sell them, just look under monitors rather than TVs and expect to pay more). However, I don't see why that would actually stop you. I have a 'smart' TV with the wireless disabled and Ethernet disconnected.
Re:Brave take (Score:5, Funny)
an explanation about not buying a $14,000 television
At least hold off until you can buy Monster Ethernet cables so you get the bandwidth you need.
Re:Brave take (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're sitting close enough to see the pixels, you are 'watching the equipment' not the show. Like an 'audiophile' listens to the stereo, not the music.
4k screens are for monitors and VR displays, 8k will be the same. I'm just glad stupid people will cover the R&D costs of my future monitors.
Re:Brave take (Score:4, Interesting)
Rich people, really. What do you think I'm going to do when that $175k Congressional salary starts rolling in? Buy a $1,500 bespoke suit at my local tailor, of course. There's no way I need a $175k salary, so it may as well go into the local poverty-stricken district of my city where some entrepreneur has attracted wealthy clients to create local jobs.
Of course I'm going to eliminate my mortgage and car loan, too. That'll take uh. Two months. I'll also have a nicer yard, seeing as so many people in my neighborhood are desperate for jobs and are willing to clean up the trash and do the gardening for pretty cheap. Even at $15/hr, that's only $150/week for a ten-hour weekly maintenance schedule. I'd like to rebuild my rear deck with some composite but maybe I'll just pay somebody else to strip it down and redo that for me, too; along with doing some electrical work and finally installing that 40-amp ChargePoint I've been meaning to get.
I'm still not buying a $5,000 TV; screw that. 4K UHD OLED TVs will be under $1,000 by the time I'm ready to buy.
What? You didn't think I'd already planned for how to deal with this unnecessarily-large compensation package? I plan for everything.
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You realize that government salaries aren't tax free? Politicians are scum, but they know that would be one grift too far. Take home on $175k isn't that high, not that there's any chance.
Well, by default, yes. But any politician worth his salt in corruption going to get around it.
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You think $1500 will get you a nice custom tailored suit.
Sure. I've seen the handiwork for an $1,100 suit and it's better than the $800 off-the-rack-and-tailored suit I'm wearing now. I'm not Mubarak.
You realize that government salaries aren't tax free? Politicians are scum, but they know that would be one grift too far.
Take-home is about $127,000. My current take-home is just under 45% of that. My mandatory household expenses (food, mortgage, utilities, etc.) are roughly 33% of my take-home income.
Eliminating my car loan and mortgage takes my mandatory household expenses down to 13% of my current income. With the Congressional salary, I can (barely) run my household with
Re: Brave take (Score:2)
I feel more immersed when a movie fills my peripheral vision. At most cinemas, including my preferred IMAX, my preferred seat is in the first or second row, for the immersion.
I'm not 'watching the equipment' - I'm immersing myself
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Human eyes are diffraction limited to about 1 arc minute. Cite: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org].
Re:Brave take (Score:4, Interesting)
From your wikipedia citation:
the human eye should have a resolving power of 20 arcsecs in theory, though normally only 60 arcsecs.
Stated better, the human eye is diffraction limited at 20 arc seconds, but other factors limit the typical resolving power of thew human eye to 1 arc minute.
Some people have exceptionally good vision and can do better than 1 arc minute. The GP claim of 31.5 arc seconds is silly in its exaggerated precision.
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Look closer, 55'' 4k Sceptre, $300. Walmart, internet only.
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Yep. And far be it from me to mock those wealthy cutting-edge enthusiasts for creating an initial market for things I'd like to someday have. 8k might not be an earth-shattering improvement for watching movies from the couch, but ~200dpi on a 46 inch computer monitor still leaves plenty of room for improvement.
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My desktop monitor is 21:9 (actually 64:27) ultra-widescreen. So there are poorer choices for desktop displays in active use.
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Re:Only 8K????? (Score:4, Funny)
Pales in comparison to Frank's 2000" TV [youtu.be]. I heard he got the last one in stock.
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You know, a moderately sized 4k tv is now under $400. that's pretty reasonable, if you're going to be buying a new TV, why not?
That's the value proposition 8k and beyond will have to meet. BUT before the prices drop that level, manufacturing techniques and process need to improve -- and the only way to do that is.. making obscenely expensive panels that not many people want to buy.
But, you're right, people aren't going to (for the most part) chuck out a perfectly fine 1080p tv for 8k just because of the n
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There's the other Procrustean solution. Samsung makes a 110 inch TV that is 1.8 meters high and 2.6 meters across. It's built to order and will set you back 15 million won.
Even at UHD resolution with middle-aged vision, you should be able to dissatisfying yourself from at least arm's length.