[QuadList] OT throw our your flatscreen! 4k is on the way?
COURYHOUSE at aol.com
COURYHOUSE at aol.com
Mon Jul 9 12:01:32 CDT 2012
_http://naob-advocacy.informz.net/naob-advocacy/archives/archive_2480593.htm
l_
(http://naob-advocacy.informz.net/naob-advocacy/archives/archive_2480593.html)
Higher Definition Television is On the Way
Years ago, the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) was held in both January
and June. Since the late 1990's, it's just been a winter show, but for the
past several years, in June, CEA hosts the CEA Line Shows in New York, where
new consumer products can be featured mid-year. At this year's event,
Westinghouse Digital showed its model D55QX1, a 55-inch consumer TV featuring
"4K" resolution of 3,840 pixels (H) X 2,160 pixels (V), planned to be
released in the first quarter of 2013. LG, Sharp and Toshiba had previously shown
4K TV sets at the 2012 CES. Toshiba's 55-inch 4K set was set to debut in
Japan late in 2012 (at an expected price of $12,000) but it is not expected
to be available in the U.S. until 2013. Nonetheless, 4K TV is clearly real
and starting its introductory launch in the not-too-far future.
Industry interest in 4K is growing. In early June, the Consumer
Electronics Association announced the formation of a 4K Working Group, to act as a
forum for interested parties, including broadcasters, to define 4K
technology, discuss content options and educate consumers about 4K. The first meeting
of the main 4K Working Group was held in early July, and was well attended
by a broad cross-section of the television industry. One of the subgroups,
chaired by Bryan Burns, vice president of strategic business planning at
ESPN, will be discussing content options and is interested in the views of
broadcasters and others on business strategy and planning with respect to
the opportunities in 4K TV. Their first meeting will be held by conference
call on Thursday July 12. Those interested in participating in these
discussions should contact Kinsey Fabrizio at CEA at _kfabrizio at ce.org_
(mailto:kfabrizio at ce.org) .
The benefits of the higher resolution of 4K (as with HDTV) are dependent
on viewing distance and screen size. With 4K though, at typical viewing
distances (such as the often quoted Lechner distance of 9 feet) the minimum
screen size to appreciate the higher resolution starts to get rather large.
Given normal 20/20 visual acuity, humans can resolve objects with a subtended
angle as small as one arcminute (1/60th of a degree). Applying that
criteria to screens with different sizes and pixel count resolutions can yield
the relationship between maximum viewing distances for various sized
screens. A nicely produced graphic showing these relationships is available at
carltonbale.com and is reproduced below:
Note that the full benefit of 4K TV at the 9 foot Lechner distance would
require a screen diagonal in excess of 140 inches, whereas for HDTV a screen
diagonal of about 70" will suffice.
As it turns out, the subject of resolution, as a proxy for the subjective
judgment of realness or sense of being there, is more complicated than can
be depicted in a simple graph. For an in-depth treatment of the history of
"high definition" and all the relevant factors in evaluating high
resolution imagery, take a look at Mark Schubin's paper "_Why 4K: Vision and
Television_
(http://naob-advocacy.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0yNDgwNTkzJnA9MSZ1PTAmbGk9MTIzNTQyMTE/index.html) " presented in May 2012 at the 2012 Spring
Technical Forum of CableLabs-NCTA-SCTE.
4K source material exists now for consumers to view in movie theater
settings, but getting 4K into to the home environment is just at the beginning
stages. Version 1.4 of the HDMI specification includes support for 4K, and
the Sony BDP-S790 Blu Ray player, at an MSRP of just over $200, will upscale
HD content to 4K resolution. Broadcasters' thoughts, however, turn quickly
to the challenges of transmission requirements. After all, 4K content has
four times the number of pixels as HDTV, and the 19 MB/s data capacity
available in the ATSC DTV Standard is clearly insufficient, given the
limitations of MPEG-2 compression. But newer compression schemes may change that.
In particular, High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC), now in the final stages
of standardization by the ITU-T \ ISO/IEC Joint Collaborative Team on Video
Coding (JCT-VC), could be the compression engine that makes 4K
transmission over-the-air feasible, at least technically. At the 2012 NAB Broadcast
Engineering Conference, for example, Matthew Goldman from Ericsson presented
a paper called "High Efficiency Video Coding: Next Generation Compression
Technology Driving New Business Models for Television" in which he made the
case that today's transmission system might be able to support 4K content
with HEVC coding substituting for MPEG-2. Below is an excerpt from the
paper authored by Goldman and Ericsson colleague Mark Horton:
"Early HEVC tests have shown that original non-compressed 4K TV can be
shown at 18 Mbps compressed and still show stunning results. This figure
effectively means 4K TV could potentially be shown at bitrates currently used
for MPEG-2 Video based HD services."
The full paper, along with several other papers referencing HEVC, is
included in the 2012 NAB Broadcast Engineering Conference Proceedings, available
from _www.NABStore.com_
(http://naob-advocacy.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0yNDgwNTkzJnA9MSZ1PTAmbGk9MTIzNTQyMTI/index.html) .
Terminology is also an issue in beyond-HDTV systems, especially as a
potential confusion factor for consumers. On May 24, the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU) announced completion of a new Recommendation on the
technical details for Ultra High Definition Television or UHDTV. UHDTV as
defined by the ITU includes two levels: a "4K" level of 3,840 pixels (H) X
2,160 pixels (V) (4 times HDTV) and an "8K" level of 7,680 pixels (H) X 4,320
pixels (V) (16 times HDTV). NHK has been developing and demonstrating the
8K system known as Super Hi-Vision for several years. Super Hi-Vision
(SHV) is likely to get significant exposure this summer as some of the venues
at the Summer Olympics will be captured in SHV and shown at public sites.
While impressive in large venues, getting the full benefit of 8K images at
the Lechner distance in a home environment may prove to be elusive however.
Extrapolating the graph above to 8K resolution would limit the potential set
of optimized homes to those with castle-size doors and 12 foot-plus
ceilings-perhaps old Victorian homes will become all the rage with the next
generation's videophile crowd!
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