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Laser TV's are on the way!!!
I still run a tube based TV at home. I'm waiting on this tech before I upgrade since I hate both LCD and Plasma (ugly dithering in both since they have very hard times producing decent color).
-S http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.en...r-img_0748.jpg http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.en...r-img_0745.jpg http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.en...u-img_0785.jpg http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.en...u-img_0770.jpg |
Population reduction is on it's way. :yep:
ZAP, your history. :ping: |
Hardly. Its zap, we have you captivated with neat colors while we pass more PC laws! That is the danger here! :D
-S PS. Laser TV's actually do have good color. They can produce an estimated 70% of the color that your human eye can see. LCD's do about 30% to 35% only. |
That's pretty funny, SUBMAN1. A paper here recently carried an article about SuperHD-DVDs being used in movie theaters, and he noted that in large scenes of "amber waves of grain" there was still a fair amount of digitization. His quote: "SuperDVDs claim to capture millions of colors. Only film still captures ALL the colors; and that's billions."
I'll be curious to see where all this new tech ends up. |
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Besides, you have compression. A RAW uncompressed DVD can easily take up 150 GB of data, which is why MPEG-2 is used to bring it down to 4.37 GB to 7.8 GB. WIth compression comes quality loss. MPEG-2 is not bad though, and is better than MPEG-4 for high action scenes - it has more I frames. MPEG-4 trades more P frames for I frames, and this results in higher compression, but is best used for static frames since P frames only record the change from the default I frame. Notice if an I frame has an error, P frames will continue to propogate that error until the next I frame too. I'm way off topic now. :) -S |
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