bigger and sharper is always good, however its too soon to add another res. Movies are still going to be 1080, and halo 3 couldnt even run in 720p and maintain a steady framerate.
I'm just not sure this is where they should concentrate.
With that said, movies are filmed in what could be considered 4000p. IMAX is even higher. But unless media is available, I dont see the point beyond outputting from a beefy computer with SLI videocards to a projector.
"With that said, movies are filmed in what could be considered 4000p. IMAX is even higher. But unless media is available, I dont see the point beyond outputting from a beefy computer with SLI videocards to a projector."
Digital media (downloaded content) could probably be made available in the future, when/if these screens become available at an affordable price. Whether studios would want to release 4000p content into the wild is highly debatable, even if they are able to hamper it with what they perceive to be unpenetrable encryption and DRM. I could see home videos shot in 4000p, though, at some point in the future. Wouldn't it be funny if your home movies looked better than the video the studios and networks allowed you to see?
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
locke6854 @ Dec 18th 2007 6:41AM
bigger and sharper is always good, however its too soon to add another res. Movies are still going to be 1080, and halo 3 couldnt even run in 720p and maintain a steady framerate.
I'm just not sure this is where they should concentrate.
With that said, movies are filmed in what could be considered 4000p. IMAX is even higher. But unless media is available, I dont see the point beyond outputting from a beefy computer with SLI videocards to a projector.
BrianS @ Dec 18th 2007 8:04AM
your wrong...animated movies are rendered at academy resolution 4k and films have no defining resolution
Leonardo DiCrapio @ Dec 18th 2007 9:42AM
"With that said, movies are filmed in what could be considered 4000p. IMAX is even higher. But unless media is available, I dont see the point beyond outputting from a beefy computer with SLI videocards to a projector."
Digital media (downloaded content) could probably be made available in the future, when/if these screens become available at an affordable price. Whether studios would want to release 4000p content into the wild is highly debatable, even if they are able to hamper it with what they perceive to be unpenetrable encryption and DRM. I could see home videos shot in 4000p, though, at some point in the future. Wouldn't it be funny if your home movies looked better than the video the studios and networks allowed you to see?