19. apr 2006, 20:44
#4973
http://www.hdtvuk.tv/2006/04/1080p_hd_questi.html#more
spændende artikel om hdtv, hvis nogen har lyst til lidt læsning..
og for de sportsinteresserede, så læs lige om Arsenals nye stadion :-)
http://www.hdtvuk.tv/2006/04/sony_and_arsena.html#more
Er der forøvrigt nogen der kan forklare det her, for det forstår jeg ikke helt??
Philips
There are two versions of 1080P – 1080P/50 for which it’s unlikely that there will be any native content available in the foreseeable future and 1080P/24 which is likely to be adopted by the movie industry for Blu-ray. Blu-ray will upconvert 1080 50i to 50p resulting twice the pixel rate of today’s 1080 50i, in this case we recommend that viewers not use the upconverted 1080 50p but install the output mode on the Blu-ray to 1080 50i and leave the PQ processing (including upscaling to 1080 50p) to the Flat TV. 1080/24p carries the same pixel rate as a 1080 50i source, which automatically means that today’s hardware can handle it, but this format (film) will add judder.
spændende artikel om hdtv, hvis nogen har lyst til lidt læsning..
og for de sportsinteresserede, så læs lige om Arsenals nye stadion :-)
http://www.hdtvuk.tv/2006/04/sony_and_arsena.html#more
Er der forøvrigt nogen der kan forklare det her, for det forstår jeg ikke helt??
Philips
There are two versions of 1080P – 1080P/50 for which it’s unlikely that there will be any native content available in the foreseeable future and 1080P/24 which is likely to be adopted by the movie industry for Blu-ray. Blu-ray will upconvert 1080 50i to 50p resulting twice the pixel rate of today’s 1080 50i, in this case we recommend that viewers not use the upconverted 1080 50p but install the output mode on the Blu-ray to 1080 50i and leave the PQ processing (including upscaling to 1080 50p) to the Flat TV. 1080/24p carries the same pixel rate as a 1080 50i source, which automatically means that today’s hardware can handle it, but this format (film) will add judder.