Wile E
Power User
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2006
- Messages
- 24,318 (3.67/day)
System Name | The ClusterF**k |
---|---|
Processor | 980X @ 4Ghz |
Motherboard | Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD5 BIOS F12 |
Cooling | MCR-320, DDC-1 pump w/Bitspower res top (1/2" fittings), Koolance CPU-360 |
Memory | 3x2GB Mushkin Redlines 1600Mhz 6-8-6-24 1T |
Video Card(s) | Evga GTX 580 |
Storage | Corsair Neutron GTX 240GB, 2xSeagate 320GB RAID0; 2xSeagate 3TB; 2xSamsung 2TB; Samsung 1.5TB |
Display(s) | HP LP2475w 24" 1920x1200 IPS |
Case | Technofront Bench Station |
Audio Device(s) | Auzentech X-Fi Forte into Onkyo SR606 and Polk TSi200's + RM6750 |
Power Supply | ENERMAX Galaxy EVO EGX1250EWT 1250W |
Software | Win7 Ultimate N x64, OSX 10.8.4 |
if your video card is actually outputing at 24hz, everything would be extremely choppy due to the very low frame counts, not just videos.
No, videos aren't choppy at 24fps, unless you run into pulldown issues. Movies have natural motion blur. You can't directly compare movies and games in terms of framerate.
Yes, quite - a 24Hz flicker on a CRT would be a 'delight'.
Every movie you have watched on a tube TV has been under 30fps. Movies and games are very different. There is no choppiness in a 24 or 30fps video.
You don't see the frame repeats at all. It crams 5 frames in the same amount of time it was only supposed to do one. Your eye does not notice it. To your eye, it appears as a single 24fps frame. Instead of playing a single frame at 1/24 of a second, it plays the same frame 5 times at 1/120 of a second each time.All that does is make the judder uniform. Repeating a frame is very, very visible to the eye and looks crap. Doing it 5 times for a 120Hz display won't make a blind bit of difference. The picture is literally moving one, stopping for a bit and then moving again. This stop-go motion is highly visible and objectionable.
Here in the UK, we use a 50Hz/fps PAL video system. A 24fps film is played back at 25fps, which results in every frame being shown twice. This leads to very visible judder and looks very unpleasant. Some TVs have the frame interpolation function, making the film motion look smooth like on 50Hz video. Because the TV has to guess how the inbetween frames should look, frame interpolation works to varying degrees of success and can easily cause its own artifacts.
Also, I happen to be able to prove this at home. My DVR can play back smoothly at double speed (without sound). Do that with film and the judder disappears completely, as it's being shown only once. The motion is silky smooth and has no unpleasant artifacts.
Why they still insist on using cruddy old 24 or 25fps film for modern made-for-TV productions beats me.
+1
Again, a 24fps movie played on a 60hz display jitters because of pulldown. It plays one frame 3 times, then the next frame 2 times. It's this uneven amount of frame repeats that causes the jitter. 120hz screens repeat all frames the same amount of times.
Pal is completely unrelated to this discussion.
Playing your DVR at double speed does not prove your point. It is also a completely unrelated phenomenon.
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