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So my question to others out there are what do you think will be the next step in definition format? I believe that the next step or industry coin term will be Ultra Definiton (UD). This is a theory and I want to hear what others guess it to be. Let's hear it everyone.

2007-08-02 20:06:18 · 4 answers · asked by fanthemdl 2 in Consumer Electronics TVs

TV TECH-man, first off, thank you for you informative answer. But nowhere in my question did I mention that I was talking about home tv. I said industry coin term and I also said theory, as in I just wanted some far out or whatever answers also. Like I said before, thanks for your answer also.

2007-08-03 08:48:15 · update #1

4 answers

FIRST.....the limiting FACTOR is HD TV signal.....it will be 1080 i for decades.....no upgrades for that part of the equation....

NOW the only possible IMPROVEMENT would be the HD-DVD and GAME systems....

Just how far do we need to improve that? Maybe 2160 at the most....

These 4800 to 7200 line units are the DLP Movie units you see in movie theaters right now.....There no room big enough to put a picture that size in your home...
You'd have to build a movie theater in your home like all the rich people do....
Not home theater.....Movie Theater !

Your TV is too small for UD.....

2007-08-03 00:11:10 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I am afraid that TV Techs by nature deal in logic , your question delves into the area of imagination and flights of fancy !!!
Considering that TV Tech-mans answer was a very good one indeed .
All I can add as a TV Tech is that the ultimate definition of a picture is reached when it equals the ability of the human eye to perceive it.
Cheers Pete

2007-08-03 11:22:29 · answer #2 · answered by Realist 2006 6 · 0 0

There is already work on higher resolution formats, one termed SHDTV, super HDTV. NHK labs in Japan has demonstrated 7,680 x 4,320 pixels.

Systems like these could provide incredible immersive experiences in theaters. But I suspect they may be a long time coming to regular theaters as these are only just starting to add digital projection. More likely they'd be used in specialty venues, kind of like the present IMax, or possibly in places like Sony Metreon.

2007-08-05 07:29:06 · answer #3 · answered by link 7 · 0 0

yea this is what the are working on right now but there is a huge problem with storage space it takes 3 terabytes to store 18 minutes of ultra hd video that is crazy and would be very very expensive here is a page on it http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultra_hdtv

2007-08-06 12:03:45 · answer #4 · answered by Cole H 2 · 0 0

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