http://www.ebay.in/itm/New-LG-43-UL...101525?hash=item238474c915:g:fQgAAOSwRJ9XhPfh
A lot of my friends are buying this TV for their Pro . How does this fare? Should I give it a thought?
Ask @orangpelupa,
http://www.ebay.in/itm/New-LG-43-UL...101525?hash=item238474c915:g:fQgAAOSwRJ9XhPfh
A lot of my friends are buying this TV for their Pro . How does this fare? Should I give it a thought?
Scorpio without a 4K TV seems to be a bit of a waste imo. The downscale (which I do today with PC) is not enough. Downscaling cleans up edges lines, but it not the same as 4K.
Well 4k might not be worth 4k, depends on the screen size and viewing distance. The average Walmart 4k buyer is probably sitting 12' from a 55" screen. But hey, they get to sell more TVs and that is the real point. It has little to do with image quality.
moved my post as was of topic to https://forum.beyond3d.com/posts/1988347/I'm almost certain that this $2k projector is not a real 4K projector, but could you link to the model/news you are talking about?
recent development Optoma UHD60I'm almost certain that this $2k projector is not a real 4K projector, but could you link to the model/news you are talking about?
http://m.projectorpeople.com/projec...sp?itemid=41655&itmname=Optoma-UHD60&sid=PCELUltra High Resolution of 3840x2160,3000 lumens, 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio, High Dynamic Range in the form of HDR10, vertical lens shift and a massive 1.6x Zoom,the Optoma UHD60 has been engineered to deliver the ultimate 4K UHD home viewing experience. The Optoma UHD60 is powered by a revolutionary Texas Instruments 4K DLP UHD Chipset with a high performance DMD utilizing XPR video processing technology with fast switching to display 8.3 million “distinct” pixels as mandated by the Consumer Technology Association’s 4K UHD 2160p specification.
recent development Optoma UHD60
i was surprised also!
http://m.projectorpeople.com/projec...sp?itemid=41655&itmname=Optoma-UHD60&sid=PCEL
think last i looked equivalent was around twice that.Thanks I hadn't heard of that. It does still use a pixel shift technique to achieve that 4K resolution from 2716 x 1528 individual micro-mirrors. Pixel shifting technique uses one pixel/mirror in 2 separate positions in a frame through high refresh rate and works very well. Apparently with having about half the amount of micro-mirrors to real 4K, the the end result is virtually identical to 4K.
does @orangepelupa have this tv?Ask @orangpelupa, [emoji38]
Well 4k might not be worth 4k, depends on the screen size and viewing distance. The average Walmart 4k buyer is probably sitting 12' from a 55" screen. But hey, they get to sell more TVs and that is the real point. It has little to do with image quality.
I saw a new 4k hdr pj for $2k just come out (have 1080p pj), so maybe get that or replace TV, need to decide which would be best, although may stick with what I've got for a while longer and miss out on the 4k goodness.
HDR+ is DOA. It's another misleading 'format' made by Samsung, that is supposed to make SDR content look like HDR. Needless to say, it's the usual Samsung drivel.
Every HDR TV has a function to make SDR content 'look like HDR' that doesn't really work very well unless it's kept to low levels, obviously.
Summabitch!!!!
Not really for me because I just bought a new TV.
http://www.xbox.com/en-us/xbox-one-x
Specs are listed as HDMI 1.4b (in) and HDMI 2.0b (out). You still get AMD FreeSync but no HDMI 2.1.
And why 1.4b in, MS acts like there unlikely a future where setup boxes deliver 4k above 30hz and HDR.
What's the likelihood of freesync coming to TVs without hdmi 2.1?
I guess HDMI 2.1 hardware or cert process was taking too long. Maybe the hardware is there so just a software patch is needed. Read that it's possible if the product has an upgradeable HDMI chipset.
2016 Samsung TVs are getting HDR+ so maybe VRR support over 2.0b.
Microsoft has already confirmed 2.1 support. Just can't list the spec on the box until the standard is ratified. http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/digitalfoundry-2017-project-scorpio-supports-freesync-and-hdmi-vrr
To cut a long story short, Scorpio supports AMD's FreeSync - and the upcoming variable refresh rate support baked into the next-gen HDMI 2.1 spec.
Funny thing that my ages old 720p Bravia has Wide Colur Gamut and Live colour producing pretty reddish visuals which newer TVs seem to shwo off. No HDRof course.Mine is uh610t. Have shitty color and contrast ratio.
Hdr X sdr game looks almost the same, hdr colors looks more cartoony.
Hdr movies looks nicer tho.
According to rtings, the TV linked above have similar spec but wider color gamut.
Funny thing that my ages old 720p Bravia has Wide Colur Gamut and Live colour producing pretty reddish visuals which newer TVs seem to shwo off.