On 01/05/14 19:53, jdd wrote:
Le 01/05/2014 11:49, Basil Chupin a �crit :
does not make a difference to what appears on the screen, then try and see for yourself.
for computer work, sure, but for movies?
I do not watch TV or DVDs or BD discs on a TV set. I only watch the above on my computer monitor. My wife and I have different tastes so she has the LG big screen TV in the lounge to watch whatever she wants to watch while I watch whatever I want on the computer monitor. Do, in answer to your comment - I only watch DVD/Bd discs on the computer monitor.
do you know digital movie projection (in true cinemas) is only 1920x1080? (in fact just a bit more, true 2k, but the difference is null)
at 25 i/s, most movie is blurred anyway :-(
The speed of the projection has nothing to do with the clarity of the picture. I have taken 8mm movies, and 16mm movies, and have played around with 24 fps and 32 fps and even played around with the frame rate per second which is banned (or was ?] because it us used for subliminal affect on your brain. Your statement about movies in cinemas being shown at only 1920x1080 resolution of course would produce crap images. How would you spread 1920 pixels x1080 pixels over an area which may be, say, 7 metres by 5 metres? In case you didn't know, the next 3rd part of The Hobbit was filmed at 48fps and at 5K resolution instead of 24fps and 4K resolution. And it's also in 3D. BC -- Using openSUSE 13.1, KDE 4.13.0 & kernel 3.14.2-1 on a system with- AMD FX 8-core 3.6/4.2GHz processor 16GB PC14900/1866MHz Quad Channel RAM Gigabyte AMD3+ m/board; Gigabyte nVidia GTX660 GPU -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org