4K vs UHD
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@dafyre I swear to god it monitors what you're doing and knows the worst possible moments.
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I currently have a 45" Sharp Acquos that i purchased in 2005. I sit around 15 feet from my TV. From the papers I've seen I can get something around 75-80 and I should be still comfortable at my seating distance without it seeming to big.
I've been looking at the HD (lol) 1080p TVs. A Sharp is around $1900, but the "4K" model is around double... and in the store it really doesn't seem like that much better (if any) than the 1080p model.
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@Dashrender for larger than 50" go with a projo, you will not regret it
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@MattSpeller said:
@Dashrender for larger than 50" go with a projo, you will not regret it
NO WAY IN HELL!
Unless you can completely control the lighting, which I can't in my living room, projectors are horrible.
The possible exception is if you drop the wad on a $10K + machine with ultra bright lumins.
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I still have Dell Ultrasharp 24" 1920x1080 monitors. I used to have HP DreamColors but they are too pricey
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@MattSpeller said:
@Dashrender for larger than 50" go with a projo, you will not regret it
I hate the contrast from projectors just no as accurate.
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I can't be the only fan of a really nice projector throwing a 10' screen on the wall of a tiny apartment. I like the screen so big that you can JUST see both sides without turning your head
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@MattSpeller said:
I can't be the only fan of a really nice projector throwing a 10' screen on the wall of a tiny apartment. I like the screen so big that you can JUST see both sides without turning your head
Don't get me wrong - in my basement, perhaps one day I'll do that (but not likely since I'll be able to get a 10' TV for 1/3 or less the price of a great projector). Again only available in my basement where there are no windows, no light pollution.
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@Dashrender said:
@MattSpeller said:
I can't be the only fan of a really nice projector throwing a 10' screen on the wall of a tiny apartment. I like the screen so big that you can JUST see both sides without turning your head
Don't get me wrong - in my basement, perhaps one day I'll do that (but not likely since I'll be able to get a 10' TV for 1/3 or less the price of a great projector). Again only available in my basement where there are no windows, no light pollution.
Yeah that's my plan at some point for movies, but not for every day usage.
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@MattSpeller said:
I can't be the only fan of a really nice projector throwing a 10' screen on the wall of a tiny apartment. I like the screen so big that you can JUST see both sides without turning your head
My father dropped ~$7-8K on his current projector and another ~$5K on the rest of the equipment/room for the home theater. He and I did the install ourselves and he now has a fantastic 12' 16:9 3D ready home theater... Unfortunately we can't really control the lighting as much as I would like... but either way it is a badass man cave. He loves watching football on it... not much of a sports person, I've played a few games on it when I hooked my laptop up to it. Playing Totalwar on a 12' screen is amazing.
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@coliver Call me when you can emulate a Holodeck and I'll come visit.
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Then I could hire Wil Wheaton to mop the holodeck
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So we should get this topic back on track... Is it 4k, 2160p, 1080p, or 1080i, or less? lol.
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$0.02
2160P = 3840x2160
4K = whatever the other one was, 4096xsomething?
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@MattSpeller 4096 x 2160 as well, lol. Just to make it even more confusing!
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@dafyre sigh
Thread TL;DR - some bastard marketing wanks have made things confusing that should be straight forward.
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@MattSpeller said:
@dafyre sigh
Thread TL;DR - some bastard marketing wanks have made things confusing that should be straight forward.
Hence Scott's suggestion of dumping the names and just moving to pure resolution markers...
the problem with that.. the public will ask - uh.. are these different resolutions all compatible?
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@Dashrender Well that depends on how the signal is encoded... What happens if you try to play a 4096x2160 video on a 1920 x 1080 TV? If it his hooked up to a PC, then the PC handles the scaling of the video to the right resolution...
The trick will be getting older TVs that understand say... 720p and give them the ability to downscale the video to their size... Some DVD players can Up / Downscale video nowdays... Getting it onto older TVs would be a bit tricker.
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I see a huge potential problem in the coming months/years as there are more and more options. TVs will need to be flash updatable so they can be upgraded to support the ability to convert signals on the fly, or else we'll have people with tv sets that just aren't workable.