My guess is there will be practical limits on speed of laser reading discs and discs with sufficient layers, so maybe there will be movies on cartridges of flash memory or some other form of storage that can be read super fast without overheating.
Good question. I'm curious if the video of some high speed action or a lot of stuff moving on screen at high speed will cause the video to blur or pixelate.Has anyone actually seen 8K? Is there a huge difference at this point?
Have you made the jump to 4K UHD media yourself yet or are you strictly a streamer?
What about your television?
I grew up on VHS and box-shaped televisions.
For me, DVDs are still cutting edge!
Yeah a couple of months ago upgraded my old plasma and went with a 55 inch LG OLED when the price was in my range(around £1000), I'm mostly physical media, the odd streaming for stuff that I can't get or that I don't think would be worth a rewatch, about a dozen UHD releases so far although quality BR's look excellent to.
Very cool. I just bought the same TV but in a 70". It's a remarkable piece of hardware, isn't it?
I think I've got about the same number of UHD discs, perhaps a couple more, maybe 15. I buy all my new releases in UHD but I'm being judicious about which movies I upgrade if I already own a Blu-ray of it. It's got tp be an absolute favorite for me to double-dip on it. Well, actually, I've been around long enough to be on my fourth type of physical media with some films. With older classics like HALLOWEEN, AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON & THE EVIL DEAD I own them on VHS, DVD, Blu-ray & now UHD. The only format I skipped was laserdisc.
Very cool. I just bought the same TV but in a 70". It's a remarkable piece of hardware, isn't it?
I think I've got about the same number of UHD discs, perhaps a couple more, maybe 15. I buy all my new releases in UHD but I'm being judicious about which movies I upgrade if I already own a Blu-ray of it. It's got tp be an absolute favorite for me to double-dip on it. Well, actually, I've been around long enough to be on my fourth type of physical media with some films. With older classics like HALLOWEEN, AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON & THE EVIL DEAD I own them on VHS, DVD, Blu-ray & now UHD. The only format I skipped was laserdisc.
The only newer stuff I have in UHD at the moment is Blade Runner 2049 and Sicario, its mostly been older classics like the original Blade Runner, Alien, 2001, Angel Heart, The Shining, etc.
That said I actually think a lot of the benefit of 4K has been forcing studio's to do higher quality remasters of a lot more releases, 4K scans and keep the grain rather than just using HD level scans originally intended for DVD's. I'm watching the German release of Paris Texas right now on BR and it looks fantastic, not quite as good as it would in UHD I'd guess but much better than the BR for a few years ago.
I dont like how they are changing the color grade on stuff. Like T2 looks like a completely different movie on the 4k. They also digitally changed some stuff, like put Arnies face over the stuntmans on a few scenes where jts clearly visible they used a stuntman. The old Lionsgate blu ray isnt as sharp, but atleast its the original movie without being George Lucas'd with new fx and a teal-orange color grade (which looks great, but just isnt authentic to how the movie originally looked which was more steely and cool.)
You got a 70" or 65"?
You got a 70" or 65"?
Nobody cares howe big your tv is dude!
I’m curious if 4K streaming will ever take off. Many internet companies have data caps. Mine is like 1000gb a month. You’d be over within a few days streaming 4K movies and tv shows.
and I don’t even own a DVD player anymore. I’m straight up streaming everything. Fuck discs
Works fine on Netflix. I can easily have 3-4 TVs running Netflix 4K HDR Dolby Vision. No lag at all. Think I read somewhere that the average for a Netflix movie in highest res is around 60gb used. Who the hell has data caps in 2020?
In vegas with Cox I think it’s 1TB a month. But you can pay more to have unlimited. And Cox is the top dog in Vegas.Works fine on Netflix. I can easily have 3-4 TVs running Netflix 4K HDR Dolby Vision. No lag at all. Think I read somewhere that the average for a Netflix movie in highest res is around 60gb used. Who the hell has data caps in 2020?