In professional video there isn't a choice any more. CRTs can not be had. To give a reference a typical broadcast reference monitor CRT cost around 1000$ per screen inch.
Given the broadcast centric features this monitor is meant to replace a 15-17k unit.
There is no professional level monitor out there that replaces CRT. Many people have tried to make some but unlike the age of CRT's, consumer televisions are pushing down the quality of lcd displays.
The technologies of sed, fed and oled fully match the requirements of response speed, contrast and color gamut. None of them are commercially available. I'm really hoping that a 20" oled comes our for around 20k. It would corner the market almost instantly.
The lack of professional level displays also points out a flaw in professional creation at this point. Places that make film can transition to DLP based projection units to make digital film.
For broadcast and dvd authoring there is a big problem. The previous standards itu.601 and rec.709 were designed to create ideal versions of home tvs. The 601 standard is for SD content and the 709 standard is for HD content. Now most homes have a wide array of technology with a vastly different display traits.
SD content has to look good on a HD display and to some extent vice versa. Dvd and HDM authoring facility now as a final step in quality control look at content on a variety of consumer displays to make sure that it will look good in peoples homes.
The necessity of this step means that there needs to be a new standard for broadcast, with the possibility of greatly reduced performance, to match the current state of displays.
If the professional displays like this one can not even hit the broadcast standards what hope does a home tv with significantly worse video processing have?
BTW on a display like this HDMI is a bad idea unless you are leaving out hdcp compliance. You don't want to see your raw files through encryption.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Joe @ Feb 20th 2008 1:32PM
In professional video there isn't a choice any more. CRTs can not be had. To give a reference a typical broadcast reference monitor CRT cost around 1000$ per screen inch.
Given the broadcast centric features this monitor is meant to replace a 15-17k unit.
There is no professional level monitor out there that replaces CRT. Many people have tried to make some but unlike the age of CRT's, consumer televisions are pushing down the quality of lcd displays.
The technologies of sed, fed and oled fully match the requirements of response speed, contrast and color gamut. None of them are commercially available. I'm really hoping that a 20" oled comes our for around 20k. It would corner the market almost instantly.
The lack of professional level displays also points out a flaw in professional creation at this point. Places that make film can transition to DLP based projection units to make digital film.
For broadcast and dvd authoring there is a big problem. The previous standards itu.601 and rec.709 were designed to create ideal versions of home tvs. The 601 standard is for SD content and the 709 standard is for HD content. Now most homes have a wide array of technology with a vastly different display traits.
SD content has to look good on a HD display and to some extent vice versa. Dvd and HDM authoring facility now as a final step in quality control look at content on a
variety of consumer displays to make sure that it will look good in peoples homes.
The necessity of this step means that there needs to be a new standard for broadcast, with the possibility of greatly reduced performance, to match the current state of displays.
If the professional displays like this one can not even hit the broadcast standards what hope does a home tv with significantly worse video processing have?
BTW on a display like this HDMI is a bad idea unless you are leaving out hdcp compliance. You don't want to see your raw files through encryption.
VinylVision @ Feb 20th 2008 5:17PM
Thanks for your astute, well informed post about a bewildering problem. Sony are you listening?