Soria Moria
Senior Member
There are thankfully 480 Hz OLED monitors now however it won't do anything for movies and such sadly.But both are really equally "wrong" since the only way of solving that problem is simply by upping the framerate.
There are thankfully 480 Hz OLED monitors now however it won't do anything for movies and such sadly.But both are really equally "wrong" since the only way of solving that problem is simply by upping the framerate.
No that'll take a while.There are thankfully 480 Hz OLED monitors now however it won't do anything for movies and such sadly.
Ever heard of soap-opera effect?Or the industry could move to make 48fps or 60fps the norm. I mean, even phones record at 4k/60fps these days
Sure, but I don't think it's quite the same when a TV fakes frames vs real 60fps, I didn't have a problem with 48fps on the hobbit movies.Ever heard of soap-opera effect?
Frame interpolation will almost always look bad, especially when the source framerate is low (They Shall Not Grow Old is a "good" example of this, totally unwatchable imo).Ever heard of soap-opera effect?
I have created 4K 60fps footage, using frame interpolation with Ai. it is not pretty!
just play a 4K 60fps you can shoot with a mobile phone on a large screen. It is clean, bright, sharp video, but it also looks like you shot it with a phone or camcorder.
My point exactly! thank you.Here's a real movie scene in real non-upscaled 60 fps:
Hehe, this looks so silly.Here's a real movie scene in real non-upscaled 60 fps:
DittoI mean, I love 60fps for sports and concerts and stuff like that...
please explain.My family watches primarily in an open concept living area where there is a lot of light leak. Oled is the best option. I don't exactly agree with your assumptions - but I am glad you shared them . Home theaters are less in the moment IMO.
Yeah, we need that 8k/120 hz format. Then you will get highly detailed views of films made with anamorphic lenses. This to blur everything other than the center to give it that artistic film look.
There are a lot of windows without treatments. Lots of light.please explain.
So it is a bright room, right?There are a lot of windows without treatments. Lots of light.
Glad to see the mini-led panels beginning to get some well deserved respect.Very interesting news. The Bravia 7 might be my next TV.
Is this thread/discussion about TVs or PC-Monitors?
Each of these types of display panels used to serve different purposes; until HDMI managed to bridge that chasm.
In the case of OLED PC-monitors; there are a few different use-cases, at the "high end": One serves the gamers' fps appetite... Another use-case has become for the consumption of HD video content.
[I don't think the bitcoin-miners and AI-integrators care as much about their PC-monitors, as they may for their "high end" GPUs and CPUs.]
Do these new class of OLED PC-monitors take care of video rendering/upscaling (w/dedicated processors)?
Or
Do the streamers (OLED@4K+) rely on the built-in graphics of their CPU or are they using a dedicated add-on GPU card?
And what about the problem with burn-in, which may affect an OLED PC-monitor more readily than an OLED TV?