Japanese - 33 million pixel TV Standard

Atomic_Piggy

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Americans are still stumbling today to upgrade their ailing televisions to HD standards. Many do not realize that their friendly broadcast over the waves is about to change. As America pushes the Hi-Def deadline back, the Japanese are pushing forward with plans to drop their "Hi-Vision" standard pioneered by NHK, who is a Japanese broadcaster . The Hi-Vision technology was also used on the JAXA moon mission. The communications ministry is pouring 300 million yen into the NHK project to develop and launch a higher quality 33.2 million pixel broadcast standard by 2015. Due to the ailing USD, that is 2.735 million dollars.

The broadcast standard will be able to travel along 260 kilometers of fiber optic cable and carry 16 different wavelength signals. The total bandwidth they have achieved in tests is 24 gigabit. Back in 2003 and 2005 NHK demonstrated the ?Super-Hi-Vision ? technology. Back then, there were 16 HDTV recorders hacked together recording 18 minutes of footage. They took the resultant 3840 ? 2048 image and "upscaled" it through pixel shifting to 7680 ? 4320 pixels or 4000 scan lines. Three years later, the project is still advancing and has overcome many of the hurdles they once had.

NHK has also developed a codec to compress the 24Gbps video signal down to 180-600Mbps. The audio is dropped from 28 Mbps to 7-28Mbps. Go ahead and read that again, video data rate of 24Gbps and a 24 channel audio data rate of 28Mbps. 18 minutes of video will take up about 3.5 TB of data in a raw format. The image would be more palpable and vibrant than anything we can imagine. Yahoo news has the AFP article.

Heres a screeny: http://www.bhfo.org/images/stories/ultrahighdef.jpg
 
Here's a comparison of size:

800px-UHDV.svg.png


Here it is to scale. This technology will also feature 22.2 channel surround sound. Overkill much?
 
My eyesight isn't all that great so it all looks the same to me.
 
Sounds holyshitcake but I think that image does little justice.
 
/me waits for them to patent it "seizure-o-vision".
 
Meh for TV. badly needed for cinema's.

For home users i would rather have they spend time researching better color accuracy, higher contrast and the like.
 
Meh for TV. badly needed for cinema's.

For home users i would rather have they spend time researching better color accuracy, higher contrast and the like.

1,000,000:1 contrast ratio OLEDs are on the way.
 
Isn't the "maximum resolution for humans" something like 40-50 megapixels?
If so, it's almost the as much as the eye can see.
 
Awesome! All for the tech upgrades for higher and better resolution. Dont forget sound!
 
You can only notice so much. The current HDTV's could get sharper later, but it won't make much difference (unless you factor the size of the TV into account).
 
Amazing. Good thing our world has high texture resolutions everywhere so we don't notice pixelisation at high image resolutions..
 
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