All the good ones are married part 1

All the good ones are married part 1 Must-buy for those who liked and loved the film! How much more room for progress and improvements in picture quality do we have? A movie source is filmed with a defined quality, are there forseeable advances in increasing the source quality as well? agb90spruce On April 30, 2011 at 7:39 am 35 mm film can be scanned at 2000-4000 line vertical resolution compare to 1080, so there is still room for older movies to be improved past 1080p for digital presentation. Most masters being done now for Blu-ray and HD DVD are done at these resolutions I ve read that one recent movie I forget which one took over a terrabyte of storage, so disk capacity for such formats would still be an issue. Forget Blu-ray, all the good ones are married part 1 Digital Hollographic Disk DHD. 1 Colour Space: Blu-ray and HD DVD both use the BT709 colour space that s basically the gamut of colours allowed to describe the images. This is a wider colour space than that used for DVD, but is still narrower than the xvYCC colour space that could be used Sony HDTVs and some others are already being designed to handle this if program maetrial is made available. And since film captured these extra colours they are available to be put on disk. 2 Colour Depth: HD DVD and Blu-ray are 8 bit colour. That means each of the 3 primary primary colours can have 256 different gradiations or 16 million possible colours. While this sounds like plenty it can lead to banding when fine degrees of colour change are required. An increase to 10 bit or more likely 12 bit would give billions of colours solving any possible banding problems. 3 Resolution: As indicated above resolution improvements to 1440p or 2080p are quite possible. The latter is available now in commercial digital cinema projectors starting at 110, 000 each!. I suspect the successor to Blu-ray/HD DVD isn t that far away, in the form of some combination of 1440p resolution and 10 or 12 bit xvYCC colour. In the long term 3D or even holographic imaging is potentially possible. So bottom line there is a lot of improvement still possible. Whether much of it will be quick or financially viable is another question. After all some people are still using VCRs and Laserdisks. Probably a premium niche format initially with gradual adoption by others as hardware catches up at the average consumer level. That said, probably 5 years minimum. I think that they all the good ones are married part 1 make holographic films where you can actually live the movie and be in the middle of the action. If they do this they will definitely need to make much larger storage options ChadrockBiznatch On April 30, 2011 at 7:39 am Well unless there is some dramatic change in the way movies are watched, the only next step will be increased resolution and higher capacity discs. If by then they dont eliminate the whole compact disc thing im gonna go postal. I shouldnt have to treat my movies like they are made of glass. I should be able to just throw them around like a usb stick drive or something like that. So hopefully the next format is solid state and not a scratchable disc He who must hold the remote On April 30, 2011 at 7:39 am Thats kind of a strange question. BluRay and HD-DVD are simply delivery mechanisms for HDTV. You are NOT going to get any improvement in picture quality beyond 1080p because that is the highest resolution standard we have. The old 480 standard which we still have to support was fixed in late 19 So it took us over 60 years and an act of congress to get any improvement. I would say HDTV standard is going to be around for at least 20 years. Nothing for a while. the tv industry hates change just look at how long it took to go from black and white to color then to HD. HD will be the highest quality picture for a while at least. Lady in the Water is a fantasy movie, which was written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan. It was originally intended to be a Disney movie but, because of disagreements between Shyamalan and Disney, the movie was eventually produced by Warner Brothers. The story is of a maintenance man played by actor Paul Giamatti who discovers a woman played by Bryce Dallas Howard in his apartment buildings pool. Along with his neighbors, he gradually discovers that she is actually a water nymph who needs to get back safely to her own blue world. Click here to order your copy of Lady in the Water on blu-ray or DVD from Amazon. Cleveland Heep is an apartment building superintendent who believes he has rescued a young woman from the pool in his apartment building. However, he eventually finds out that she is really from a story and trying to return to her home in that story. He and the tenants of his building try to protect her from those all the good ones are married part 1 do not want her to go back to her story. Lady in the Water received disastrous reviews in 2006 from the critics. However, Harrison Scott Key of World magazine said, The plot turns into a its quite fun to watch.

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