Bladexdsl said:
machomuu said:
Bladexdsl said:
gokujr1000 said:
I think it's already safe to assume that a Next Gen console surpasses a Current or Last Gen console...
in the past that was true but not anymore.
But how are you going to back that up? You at least need some some type of base before you can state such a thing.
because you can't get better gfx than HD that's why. not for a long time anyway.
yeah untill they decide to release the super hi deff tv's
which have already been invented and made, only reason they are not selling them at moment is hdtv is fairly new still and they wantto milk that for all its worth
i seen super hi deff tv in action was a video clip of it being demo'd think they even ran a clip of Eastenders on it too or maybe it was satalite map images in real time but the deff on it was way beyond 1080p i think it was 16x or above beyond 1080p something super insane res, it looked amazing, its a shame blu ray and hdtv 1080p had just been out few years and so we will need to wait around 10-11 years before super hi deff tv's go on sale
thats what they said 10-11 years as hdtv needs to be milked as alot of people had bought those at the time and nowdays its pretty much standard and broadcasting etc etc.
here some more info
Ultra High Definition Television (or UHDTV, Ultra HDTV, 4320p, and Ultra High Definition Video (UHDV)) is a digital video format, currently proposed under the leadership of NHK Science & Technology Research Laboratories. It is 16 times the resolution of HDTV (high-definition video). IMAX has roughly the same resolution as UHDTV.[1][2]
Wide Quad High Definition (WQHD) (2560×1440) and Quad Full High Definition (QFHD) (3840×2160) are not the same resolution as that of UHDTV and represent intermediate resolutions mid-way between those of HDTV and UHDTV.
NHK is advocating this video format as Super Hi-Vision (SHV).
The BBC also appears to be interested in the technology. During IBC 2008 Japan's NHK, Italy's RAI, the BBC, RTE, Sony, Samsung, and Panasonic (with various partners) demonstrated the first ever public live transmission of UHDTV, from London to the conference site in Amsterdam.[10][11]
In addition, it was demonstrated at the BBC's Media Centre in West London in early October 2008. The BBC has been looking into the use of its Dirac codec with UHDTV.
On September 29, 2010, the BBC and NHK partnered up and recorded The Charlatans live in the UK in the UHDTV format, before broadcasting over the internet to Japan.[12]
On May 19, 2011, SHARP demonstrated a direct-view 85" LCD display capable of 7680 x 4320 pixels at 10 bpp.[13]
The final goal is for UHDTV to be available in domestic homes, though the timeframe for this happening varies between 2016 to 2020 (mainly based on technical reasons concerning storage and broadcast distribution of content).[14]
The BBC intends to trial UHDTV during the 2012 Summer Olympics, erecting 15 m display screens at two or three locations.[15]