- Joined
- Oct 16, 2014
- Messages
- 671 (0.18/day)
System Name | Work in progress |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5 3600 |
Motherboard | Asus PRIME B350M-A |
Cooling | Wraith Stealth Cooler, 4x140mm Noctua NF-A14 FLX 1200RPM Case Fans |
Memory | Corsair 16GB (2x8GB) CMK16GX4M2A2400C14R DDR4 2400MHz Vengeance LPX DIMM |
Video Card(s) | GTX 1050 2GB (for now) 3060 12GB on order |
Storage | Samsung 860 EVO 500GB, Lots of HDD storage |
Display(s) | 32 inch 4K LG, 55 & 48 inch LG OLED, 40 inch Panasonic LED LCD |
Case | Cooler Master Silencio S400 |
Audio Device(s) | Sound: LG Monitor Built-in speakers (currently), Mike: Marantz MaZ |
Power Supply | Corsair CS550M 550W ATX Power Supply, 80+ Gold Certified, Semi-Modular Design |
Mouse | Logitech M280 |
Keyboard | Logitech Wireless Solar Keyboard K750R (works best in summer) |
VR HMD | none |
Software | Microsoft Windows 10 Home 64bit OEM, Captur 1 21 |
Benchmark Scores | Cinebench R20: 3508 (WIP) |
8K at 4:2:2 can be downsampled to 4K at 4:4:4. So no not garbage. Better than what Hollywood distributes as feature films.Yep, this is done just to make the whole 8K thing feasible. For a full RGB 8K60 signal you would need to encode 8 GB/s worth of data, there is no way to do that in real time, especially on a CPU.
2.35:1 and wider is what projectors are designed to produce. For best quality use an anamorphic projector lens.Yeah, that was the point of my original post. All the content I'm now watching on TV is filmed at 2.35:1, and that's shown on Netflix/Prime/Disney. I'm even seeing black bars on a 16:9 TV when watching live TV through iPlayer/ITV Hub/4OD etc.
The only media content that is still 16:9 is stuff like news, chat shows, sports. TV series made in the last few years are often ultrawide, all films are ultrawide, even some popular youtube streams are now ultrawide!
I don't think it's unreasonable, as a consumer, to want to buy a device that matches the aspect ratio of the content I'm paying for.
Cinema Format Conversion Lenses
www.panamorph.com