I'm not a tech hound so your numbers mean nothing to me.
I do say its marginal so thank you for agreeing with me.
Call me when the next format change happens where I can really see that big leap.
The resolution increase is quite a bit, yes. However, I think the problem is that in order for a film to actually take advantage of that, it has to be shot in HD. As most movies/series haven't been, any (re-)release on Bluray will negate the resolution increase (beyond small details, perhaps). Some people expect all their old movies to look 10 times better; that just ain't happening.
The resolution increase is quite a bit, yes. However, I think the problem is that in order for a film to actually take advantage of that, it has to be shot in HD. As most movies/series haven't been, any (re-)release on Bluray will negate the resolution increase (beyond small details, perhaps). Some people expect all their old movies to look 10 times better; that just ain't happening.
Why not? We're talking about motion pictures here, film projected onto screens measured in feet. Any decent motion picture is going to need a lot more attention to detail than a TV show, even an HD one.Not only that, but even when it's a fantastic transfer, the sets and effects and such rarely look better on Bluray; they simply weren't expecting the viewers to see that kind of detail. When shot in HD, they are, and the sets have more detail to match. That does make a difference.
Yes, I know analog film has a potentially higher "resolution" (even though that's not really applicable), when the film is of quality and doesn't have too much grain.
The marginal increase on the existing disc format does not inspire me to get on board.
If you say so! The difference in pixel density in 480p and 1080p is a lot more then marginal. If it personally isn't worth it to you, then sure, but the increase in resolution is comparable... from 375x250 (approx) in VHS to 720x480 for DVD to 1920x1080 for Blu-Ray. DVD is a little under 4 times the pixel density of VHS and Blu-Ray is a little over 4 times the pixel density of DVD. With good hardware, the difference between all three of these formats should be obvious.
I'm not a tech hound so your numbers mean nothing to me.
I do say its marginal so thank you for agreeing with me.
Call me when the next format change happens where I can really see that big leap.
^ I'm not trying to be anal about it, but it's actually Blu-ray, not Blue-ray (not the absence of an E).![]()
Good point. So basically, it's just the crappy transfer that makes a lot of the Bluray releases look exactly like dvd releases? Or is it something else?
Good point. So basically, it's just the crappy transfer that makes a lot of the Bluray releases look exactly like dvd releases? Or is it something else?
Haha, good one. My mistake was on obvious typo though.^ I'm not trying to be anal about it, but it's actually Blu-ray, not Blue-ray (not the absence of an E).![]()
Note. I just had to point this out. Highly ironic in context.![]()
It depends on the size of the television as well. On a smaller TV you probably can't tell much if any difference between Blu-ray and DVD.
Go back and read this post in this very thread.
Good point. So basically, it's just the crappy transfer that makes a lot of the Bluray releases look exactly like dvd releases? Or is it something else?
It depends on the size of the television as well. On a smaller TV you probably can't tell much if any difference between Blu-ray and DVD.
Are you kidding?The resolution increase is quite a bit, yes. However, I think the problem is that in order for a film to actually take advantage of that, it has to be shot in HD. As most movies/series haven't been, any (re-)release on Bluray will negate the resolution increase (beyond small details, perhaps). Some people expect all their old movies to look 10 times better; that just ain't happening.
I'm sure you've seen some crappy DVD releases that were obviously transfered from a VHS source. Imagine if I were trying to sell a VHS purist on DVD and he saw that, a movie with clear VHS noise lines. He would, like Captain Craig, conclude that DVD is only a marginal improvement over VHS.Good point. So basically, it's just the crappy transfer that makes a lot of the Bluray releases look exactly like dvd releases? Or is it something else?
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