ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
Like a lot of blokes, i'm always a sucker for the latest and greatest, UHD/4K being such technology. I have alway been a little sceptical of how long it will take to be mainstream, often taking the 4-5 years predictions with a pinch of salt.
Below is a review of what looks like a very good Panasonic TV, and during the review it lays down some of the technical problems even i can understand. Might be helpful to those thinking about an 11-46 etc, but turned off by my earlier comments that UHD is upon us and you should save your cash etc(From Home Cinema Choice)................................................................
The only thing certain about the next evolution in broadcast technology is its uncertainty. 4K/Ultra HD may be widely accepted as the next step from 1080p Full HD, but even broadcasters have yet to agree a specification. While BSkyB looks certain to go with 2160p at 50/60Hz for its sports coverage, the BBC is rumoured to want native frame rates to top 100Hz. For brands eager to punt 4K screens this is all rather inconvenient, not least because TVs prior to this Panasonic model are tethered to 4K at 30Hz, thanks to the limitations of current HDMI chippery.
Contrary to popular belief, the future of TV isn't just about spatial resolution, it's about temporal resolution as well. While there's no doubt that an image four times as detailed as Full HD is impressive, broadcasters seem convinced that most consumers will struggle to appreciate the benefit unless they buy a really big screen. However, research indicates that we all immediately appreciate high frame rates: sixty 8m-pixel frames a second, which is supported by HDMI 2.0, equates to a massive 480 megapixels a second of visual information. 30 frames a second taps out at 240mp, which is a lot less detail. Small wonder then that the arrival of the world’s first HDMI 2.0 compliant screen, complete with full 18Gbps bandwidth, is potentially a game-changer.
The TX-L65WT600 reflects Panasonic’s 2013 design ethos, with a slim chrome bezel and distinctive illuminated plastic trim across the bottom edge of the screen. Its slick appearance is only broken by the HD cam positioned on top. A cable tidy umbilical tube is supplied.
Connectivity includes four HDMIs (only one of which is HDMI 2.0-enabled), Scart and component/composite inputs via adaptors, a trio of USBs (one designated for external hard drive recording), Ethernet, SD card reader and an optical digital output. Wi-Fi is integrated. This is also the first consumer telly to offer a DisplayPort input; a connection standard more commonly associated with Apple laptops and PC graphics cards. As it happens, its inclusion here is something of a masterstroke.
Naturally the WT600 features Panasonic’s internet-connected feature roster, fronted by the customisable My Home Screen user interface. Currently enjoying a slight upgrade with the addition of themed Pages, most notably from YouTube and Eurosport, this remains a uniquely intuitive UI.
While the meagre selection of catchup services in the Viera marketplace isn't a deal breaker, it remains disappointing. On the plus side, the brand has introduced its own 4K streaming service, allowing 50/60Hz clips to be viewed – provided your broadband connection is fast enough. A connection of around 50Mb/s is advised, so if you don’t have fibre you might as well forget it.
Media playback from USB is excellent, with the set playing back most key file types, including MKV video and FLAC. Across a network, compatibility is a tad more restrictive. I couldn't play any MKVs from my NAS. The WT600 also supports a UHD-enhanced version of Panasonic’s Swipe & Share DLNA technology. Mobile users can also mirror their device utilising Screen Mirroring, an implementation of Miracast.
Beosound Stage, Beovision 8-40, Beolit 20, Beosound Explore.
Surely 4K is for cinemas, and small cinemas struggle to find the finances to go digital.
For your average room TV, a complete waste of time and money. (However, a lot of us said that about HD).
The other thing to consider is the ever changing screen proportions. Whatever you have you have a good chance of viewing a cropped picture or black vertical side bars or black horizontal bars. The manufacturers will keep driving change in the standards in the hope of endless customer upgrades. I'm opting out.
Graham
For the time being and until they get the specs sorted out, this seems the right choice. Still want a 7-55
I dissagree that it is of no use in home living rooms. You see more depth in the picture en you can watch on bigger sizes en sitting more close to the screen. The better colours of 10 or 12 bit als also a big advantage and sure the higher framerate.
It's time for 4K!
Schuifschoen: I dissagree that it is of no use in home living rooms. You see more depth in the picture en you can watch on bigger sizes en sitting more close to the screen. The better colours of 10 or 12 bit als also a big advantage and sure the higher framerate. It's time for 4K!
We had a similar debate about HD screens in the past. How many people need a giant screen on which you can also read newspaper small print by going up very close? Most people will not want a cinema sized screen, and most people will use a tablet for looking at printed or similar work. Picture 'depth' is surely created in the original filming using varying depths of field. If, on the other hand, you mean improved 3D, well I've already decided not to bother with it on my BV11 and have no regrets about that. I suspect most people who have 3D very rarely use it.
4 beolab 5, beolab 9, beolab 10, beolab 5000, beolab 8000 mk2, beolab 6002, beolab 3500, beovision 7 55 mk2, 2 beovision 11 46 mk4, beotime, beosound ouverture, beosound essence, beoplay A8, beomaster 900 RG de luxe and the collection continues...
And if it does work, will it and the TV be able to do this? Without HDMI 2.0!
http://www.avforums.com/news/new-deep-colour-content-encoding-process-could-revolutionise-hd-and-uhd-4k-display-capabilities.9865
I work as a television commercial director, everything we shoot is now in 4k, the delivery is still a problem, but I am convinced once H265 or the equivalent google product is finally released it will change the way we watch TV. I have 4k monitors and I don't care what every expert says about viewing distance etc, but the 4k screen wins hands down, no matter how far you are. It has a depth and realism that looks like a still image, I really don't like most HD sets, as they turn up the sharpening and it looks terrible, with 4k we turn off the sharpening on everything 4k, it brings back a cinematic image.
It's the new super duper compression compression codec for uhd , thing is , there's no actual software to play on these amazing tvs outside 4k pro camcorders , no 4k blu rays , no 4k tv shows , no 4k movies , nothing
the other problem , the BIG problem is hdmi , 1.4 doesn't support 50/60 hz 4k only 24p , so everyone buying a 4k tv today will find it utterly useless as you need hdmi 2.0 for that
stick with 1080p , it's not exactly vhs is it ? :)
danto: I work as a television commercial director, everything we shoot is now in 4k, the delivery is still a problem, but I am convinced once H265 or the equivalent google product is finally released it will change the way we watch TV. I have 4k monitors and I don't care what every expert says about viewing distance etc, but the 4k screen wins hands down, no matter how far you are. It has a depth and realism that looks like a still image, I really don't like most HD sets, as they turn up the sharpening and it looks terrible, with 4k we turn off the sharpening on everything 4k, it brings back a cinematic image.
It would be interesting to know whether this is due to the increased pixel density or the increased depth and broader colour range of UHDTV. If it's the latter then again, all current 4K TV's (with the possible exception of the mentioned Panasonic) are unlikley to be able to accurately reproduce it.
I agree with the others, wait until the dust settles!
Ban boring signatures!
Hi, its a mixture between pixels and colour depth, but to me the colour depth and whats called the dynamic range is the big difference. HD uses a colour space called REC709, a 4k camera can record up to 14 stops of dynamic range, when that goes to HD you lose half the colour space, UHD will use a new colour space and will hold the entire range. I agree wait until HDMI2 is standard.
I think the 4k adoption will move a lot quicker then most people think, Netflix will start to stream House of Card in Feb in 4k, the manufacturers will be pushing this as they have sold all the HD sets they can. REC2020 is UHD colour space, it changes daily but only the Sony 4k are using it at the moment, so any 4k purchase has to be able to use REC2020 to reproduce a 4K image.
We tested the Canon 4k grading monitor recently, and all I can say is the image is unbelievable. It is $40 thousand, but it shows you everything in the 4k file.
as much as i love apple they're releasing the new mac pro , supposedly the ultimate creative tool for 4k with hdmi 1.4 !
oh crikey
Flappo: as much as i love apple they're releasing the new mac pro , supposedly the ultimate creative tool for 4k with hdmi 1.4 ! oh crikey
Does that mean the computer can create the content but not distribute it?
i wonder why they bothered fitting hdmi then ?
4K & HDMI have different pixels, 4K is a cinema format. 4K image (4096x2160) has 256 more lines of vertical resolution than UHD (3840x2160)
HDMI 1.4 will play 4K@25fps, but not true 4K, where it won't work is if the production is done @50fps which some productions are looking at. They put HDMI in because it is the most used connector to 3rd party monitors, I have been using a Blackmagic Ultrastudio 4k box with HDMI 1.4 to a UHD monitor and works well from a macbook pro to edit footage shot in 4K.