$10-$15 a month plus a movie rental fee? It wil never succeed. Not when I can buy many HD DVD's and BD's for 20 bucks and keep them.
BD and HD DVD are a niche market. This will be even more obscureSo, I agree that for now, purchased media and rentals of these 1080p programs and movies is the only way to get this format but 2nd will be the niche players like Xstream.
Very true! :up$10-$15 a month plus a movie rental fee? It wil never succeed. Not when I can buy many HD DVD's and BD's for 20 bucks and keep them.
Yea I think the only source that I know of was one of the recent star wars flops.
According to the salesman at Sears, Time Warner, Dish, and DirecTV all offer 1080p. "All you have to do is call them to upgrade your box." The guy he was talking to even insisted that it was 1080i only but the guy told him no, 1080p. I even shook my head when the salesman was saying this wondering if he'd get the hint but he was in too far at that point.
The claim for the product is 1080p and 7.1 lossless audio.
I'm trying to schedule a CES briefing to discuss it with them.
Best,
You should correct the errors in this statement too. However, personally, I don't think frame rate has much to do with the success or failure of this service. Ideally, all source HDTV should allow pass through in it's program's native frame rate and resolution so that the equipment to process the program for transport from live to your screen does not affect this.Most broadcasts are still 24FPS with a 3:3:2 pulldown to get the 32FPS.
vegassatellite- Sure frame rates are important. But each format has it's optimum frame rate. Today, the 1080p 24frame rate is still, IMO, in development and quite experimental.
I've been working with it for a couple of months now and many of the advantages of ridding the 3:2 pull down to convert film rate to video rates are compromised with other errors due to improper processing. It is still a quagmire to get 24fps from film to your screen without something getting in the way. Many who have reported getting it to work are using the simplest setup and all 24P passthrough.
It would be nice if when a channel shows a movie shot in film, it is transmitted in 24P frames and a documentary shot in HDCAM is sent at 29.97 fps and 1080ix1440. Leave the final I to P conversion to the display device if digital or none if CRT. (Does anyone still view on CRT? )
...Does anyone still view on CRT?
??? It isn't experimental at all. Do you mean recovering the original cadence from 24p material presented at 60i/p?