ESPN HDTV On World Cup
Some conjunct snapshots from realplayer by ACD Photo Editor. Surely the video quality was reduced due to the limitation of my graphic card/monitor and the screen capturing by software acceleration, especially on motion pictures. The real quality is very much near what we see on Apple Quicktime's H.264 movie trailers.
But what about UHDV in the future delivered by household TV sets that are unexceptionally wirelessly connected with the immense and ubiquitous Internet in the air? "The new format is four times as wide and four times as high (for a total of 16 times the resolution) as existing HDTV, which has a maximum resolution of 1920 × 1080 pixels." Have HD DVD and Blu-ray already been outdated?? For pre-recorded content, "33 megapixel frames require 3.5 terabytes of storage for a mere 18 minutes of material", that is, "1 minute of UHDV consumes 194 gigabytes of data". Do you believe the average bandwidth (500~6600 Mbit/s required...) and the chipsets' processing speed in the future can easily handle it? Amazing...
UHDV (Ultra High Definition Video) - An ultra-realistic video technology developed by the Japan Broadcasting Corporation. First prototyped in 2003 using a custom-built camera, recorder and monitor, UHDV provides 4,000 lines of resolution. Its 33 megapixel frames require 3.5 terabytes of storage for a mere 18 minutes of material. Action scenes are so realistic that some people experience nausea similar to being seasick. This technology is expected to take some time to become mainstream. Not enough we would like to throw up watching much of what is broadcast today. In the future, we can really do it. Stay tuned! - TechEncyclopedia
But what about UHDV in the future delivered by household TV sets that are unexceptionally wirelessly connected with the immense and ubiquitous Internet in the air? "The new format is four times as wide and four times as high (for a total of 16 times the resolution) as existing HDTV, which has a maximum resolution of 1920 × 1080 pixels." Have HD DVD and Blu-ray already been outdated?? For pre-recorded content, "33 megapixel frames require 3.5 terabytes of storage for a mere 18 minutes of material", that is, "1 minute of UHDV consumes 194 gigabytes of data". Do you believe the average bandwidth (500~6600 Mbit/s required...) and the chipsets' processing speed in the future can easily handle it? Amazing...
UHDV (Ultra High Definition Video) - An ultra-realistic video technology developed by the Japan Broadcasting Corporation. First prototyped in 2003 using a custom-built camera, recorder and monitor, UHDV provides 4,000 lines of resolution. Its 33 megapixel frames require 3.5 terabytes of storage for a mere 18 minutes of material. Action scenes are so realistic that some people experience nausea similar to being seasick. This technology is expected to take some time to become mainstream. Not enough we would like to throw up watching much of what is broadcast today. In the future, we can really do it. Stay tuned! - TechEncyclopedia
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