Rob Ruffo
Well-known member
This is a perfectly inconvenient truth.
Yes, but we make movies for the most discerning in our audience.
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This is a perfectly inconvenient truth.
???
You looked at a 50 inch TV capable of displaying resolutions greater than 1920 x 1080?
I didn't realise my friends and family were so poor ....
Yes, but we make movies for the most discerning in our audience.
actually I can see the gaps between them.
You must not work in Hollywood. :biggrinjester:
This is simply not true. Check your math.
That actually was my point earlier... many people may see the screen door... which is different form actually being able to see the difference between one resolution and the next higher...
-sc
Ok, so I checked my math, and there is no way based on the presumed visual acuity of 0.3 provided by the clark vision website that at 5 feet the max noticeable is 1920 x 1080.
There may be other determining factors in how the screens are made that obscure the greater resolution (how plasma and LCD screens are built etc.) but my arguement is not so much in providing a resolution that most people will no longer be able to tell the difference, but a resolution at which it is visually impossible to tell the difference. I'll take the maths for visual acuity based on line pairings over you putting some friends in front of a plasma displaying different grids at this point for determining that.
But it's not necessarily different. The gap or pitch between pixels (or screen door) typically shrinks as resolution increases. It is also, in most cases, a finer level of detail than the individual pixels, so to discount it as something different just doesn't seem like a good approach. It's true that it's different in that people may notice the screen door regardless of whether they're watching 1080p or 720p material on the same display and when viewing most people probably couldn't tell the difference between the two formats without knowing what to look for. And yet that really has no bearing on where to place a limit on resolution and the benefits of having more.
While I have not attempted specific studies of my own, I do know that 4K projection looks a hell of a lot more detailed than 2K projection. Even at screen sizes where many "experts" claim there should be no discernible advantage to having more than 2K resolution. Remember, 4K on a 20 foot wide projection screen is still only 17dpi. Projector optics these days do a fine job of blending pixels and masking pitch lines without sacrificing a terrible amount of sharpness. However, at about 6.8dpi, you can't tell me that 4K on 50ft wide theatre screen would not pale in comparison to 8K on the same screen, even when viewed from the back row, 80ft away. We can already see the advantages of increased resolution or detail in such a setting by comparing 70mm IMAX projection with conventional 35mm projection on the same width of screen at the same viewing distances. I have yet to see any situation where the increased detail does not win out.
I'm embarrassed to have posted the last thread with the images of different ISOs. I should have waited. Graeme and Deanan have been very busy in the last week so I thought I would give the new stuff a quick workout. David Mullen asked for tungsten... since I don't have a tungsten light here, I grabbed a candle. It white balances out to under 2000K, less than tungsten. I turned off all the lights in the garage and lit the candle. Best I can tell is this is ISO 4000.
The boys are going to yell at me again for posting this because they still aren't done. It won't be the last time...
Jim
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