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Remember
the Osborn? Or was it the Osborne? Actually, I knew it existed, but didn’t
care. This thing was a personal computer. Like we’d ever need one of those?
Those new electric typewriters with memory were the rage. THAT was
something!
Flash forward and we are upon the reverse engineered UFO goodies. Oh, wait,
no, that’s not exactly right.
It’s the dawning of the age of Aquarius, age of Aquarius, Ah QUAR EEEE USSS.
Um, no, that was some time ago.
It’s the age of $3 US Gas. Not a good milestone.
The age of HDTV!!! Remember when “high definition” included the terms “stems
and seeds?” You do? You rascal.
No, this is about High Definition TELEVISION. Personally, I feel the word
TELEVISON is so…. Fifties. We need a new one there. So did you jump for the
Plasma? Or the LCD projector? The DLP? Have you got the home theater with
all the tricked out electronics?
Don’t put your ear directly on the high tech train tracks, then, because
there’s another train coming, and you’ll hear it down the line.
UHDV is in the pipeline. On the track. In the lab. In the electron wind.
Want to guess? Time’s up. ULTRA HIGH DEFINITION.
Remember the movie where they invent this skull cap that would capture your
emotions and immediately the bad guy looped someone having how shall we say
– some very intense happy times… and turned himself into peak experience
broccoli? Is that where all this is headed? Not for a while, if ever.
HOWEVER: UHDV is close to the detail of 35mm film. With 7680 x 4320 pixels,
this isn’t far from the 4K (4,000 scan line) digital projection systems for
big-screen movie theaters.
Donald Trump will be able to see how bad his hair looks like never before.
UHDV features 33 million pixels with a 60 frame-per-second (fps) progressive
scan format.
NHK, the Japanese broadcasting giant who had HDTV in the 1980s… is behind
the UHDV format, but reassures us it may be a long time before home theater
UHDV becomes reality. That’s corporate talk for, “Don’t let the competition
know how close we really are!”
With 32 times the bandwidth demands of HDTV, UHDV would be prohibitive for
today’s broadcast, cable and satellite technology. NHK’s demo required a
data rate of 24 Gbps. That was a few years back in Amsterdam where some
people were close to hurling lunch because the moving car video hi-jinx was
that real.
How real?
NHK cobbled together a custom camera of four CCD image sensors; then to show
the output built a LCoS projector combining four eight-megapixel panels.
Data storage, using 16 synchronized HDTV recorders, provided roughly 18
minutes of recording time, using 3.5 terabytes of total capacity and a
screen about 12 feet high and 22 feet wide. NHK researchers called this “the
sensation of reality saturation point,” in the hopes of providing a
completely immersive experience: 100 degrees of visual field angle, viewing
from a distance of three-quarters of the height of the screen (about nine
feet) with at least 60 pixels required for each one degree of visual field
angle.
And speakers? UHDV offers 24-channel sound, or 22.2, containing vertically
arrayed surround sound speakers: nine above ear level, 10 at ear level,
three below ear level and two low-frequency subwoofer channels.
The format, according to NHK, is not so much intended for home use as for
museums, public spaces and theaters. You tell The Donald.
Once upon a time there was SHOWSCAN. Special effects pioneer Douglas
Trumbull had his demo unit in a suburb of Dallas, behind a Chucky Cheese, if
memory serves. I saw the demo.
The equipment and the Showscan Film Process of producing and projecting
Showscan films are justifiably proprietary and patented. At the time,
Showscan’s discovery was hailed as the most significant advancement in film
technology since the introduction of sound in the 1929 film “The Jazz
Singer”. (Not the one with Neil Diamond.) However, it remained as little
more than a technological curiosity until the company developed new camera,
high speed projectors, and built special theaters to showcase the
revolutionary Showscan images. There was a catch-22 at work. Theaters
weren't equipped for this state of the art projection so they couldn't
convince investors to make films in that format. Solution: do it all in
house.
I can’t remember the specs but it was scarily real, 3-D, multi channel and
way ahead of multi channel… or HDTV. I do remember it ran film through the
gate much faster than normal projection speeds.
Today the company’s simulation and specialty theatres are open or under
construction in 24 countries around the world, located in theme parks,
motion picture multiplexes, expos, world’s fairs, resorts, shopping centers,
casinos, museums, and other tourist destinations where somebody wants a
rush.
If NHK can even come close, well…
Enjoy your puny HDTV now while you can, citizen.
About The
Author
Bob Wood
cuts through confusion and technical detail to offer a clear guide: what you
need to know to shop wisely; how to then maximize the performance of your
Home Theater system. His website
www.GreatHomeTheater.com>www.GreatHomeTheater.com
has been called “refreshingly easy to understand!” © 2005 copyright
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