A random thought on the subject.
I had a very interesting conversation today with an electrical engineer
friend. Part of his current research deals with the way human (and I
suppose other animal) brains process visual information. Assuming that
his references are correct, it more or less boils down to an exercise in
data compression. My non electrical engineer understanding is that
signals from our eyes are fed to our brain. Simultaneously, the brain
creates a signal representing what it expects to see. The two signals
are compared and the visual signal is discarded except for the parts
that are different from the brain's predicted signal. Our conversation
drifted to other things but it makes me wonder how much the act of
editing might disrupt the processing of visual information and if the
realism of a display might be limited by factors other than resolution,
dynamic range, 3D, etc. --J.B.
blafarm@yahoo.com [Avid-L2] wrote:
>
>
> Yes, in 2015, there is still a consumer market segment watching
> content on SD displays.
>
>
> However, there's a big difference between how shows are produced by
> content creators (HD) -- and how they are sometimes 'downconverted'
> for cable/satellite companies that either have limited bandwidth for
> HD channels -- or that need to support customers still using older SD
> displays.
>
>
> In terms of content creators though, I don't know anyone in our
> business that was not fully converted to HD workflows 7 years ago --
> and many were converted before that.
>
>
> Like it or not, the 'horses have left the barn'. And like many other
> industries in this day and age, these trends are driven by
> technological innovations and corporate marketing forces that are
> greater than the fact that most consumers won't see the difference
> between HD and 4k -- and that are also greater than a postproduction
> industry's objection to incurring the cost of upgrading their physical
> plant to support new technologies.
>
>
> And, although I wish HDR was more in the forefront of consumer
> consciousness than 4k, I believe progress in the realm of display
> technology is an unstoppable train. You can stay on it -- or you can
> get off it -- but it's going to keep moving forward and no amount of
> complaining about it will change that.
>
>
>
>
Posted by: John Beck <jb30343@windstream.net>
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