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LG will unveil a 55-inch 8K TV at CES
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 14 December, 2014
According to a new report, LG is preparing to unveil a new TV with 8K resolution at the upcoming CES event in Las Vegas.
The 55-inch TV has a ridiculous 7,680 x 4,320 pixel resolution and 'over 20 display driver integrated circuits installed. The TV also has 500 nits brightness because "unlike conventional displays that use RGB sub-pixels, LG added a W sub-pixel to increase the brightness."
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Please read the original article before posting your comments.
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Member
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14. December 2014 @ 07:36 |
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I've been looking for a new monitor, but have been holding out because I knew something like this would show up. Hope it's going to not cost a small fortune, something I sure it will. Haha
Custom Computer rebuild 2.80GHZ@6cores/8GBRAM|3DS | WII|360|PS3|

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Member
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14. December 2014 @ 10:43 |
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Awesome specs, but too early, IMO. 4K still in the very early stages of adoption. Would be cool to see in person, though. I wasn't overly impressed with 4K in side-by-side comparisons with 1080, but this should be more noticeable; especially in 60" + models.
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Interestx
Senior Member
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15. December 2014 @ 21:56 |
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I hope 4k is ditched & 8k is the next standard.
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Member
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16. December 2014 @ 13:23 |
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Originally posted by Interestx: I hope 4k is ditched & 8k is the next standard.
While I cannot dispute the fact that 8k is better than 4k (which is better than 1080P), ditching 4K before it's even fully implemented is just going to piss off consumers; especially those that just dropped $2K on that shiny new 4K TV. Most consumers are still happy with their 1080P, including myself. 4K media is still M.I.A., and many households don't have the bandwidth (or ISPs) that can handle that much info yet.
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Senior Member
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16. December 2014 @ 15:55 |
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The whole article it seams mislead:
This TV's still in the 4K range, since the small # is the one take it in consideration as the commander of the range.
Example:
7,680 * 4,320 = 4320 = 4K
1,920 * 1,080 = 1080 HD
1,280 * 720 = 720 HD
640 * 480 = 480
640 * 360 = 360
etc.
Live Free or Die.
The rule above all the rules is: Survive !
Capitalism: Funnel most of the $$$ to the already rich.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. December 2014 @ 16:12
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AfterDawn Addict
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16. December 2014 @ 17:25 |
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Originally posted by Mrguss: The whole article it seams mislead:
This TV's still in the 4K range, since the small # is the one take it in consideration as the commander of the range.
Example:
7,680 * 4,320 = 4320 = 4K
1,920 * 1,080 = 1080 HD
1,280 * 720 = 720 HD
640 * 480 = 480
640 * 360 = 360
etc.
4K UHDTV (2160p) is 3840 pixels wide by 2160 pixels tall (8.29 megapixels), which is four times as many pixels as 1920x1080 (2.07 megapixels).
8K UHDTV (4320p) is 7680 pixels wide by 4320 pixels tall (33.18 megapixels), which is sixteen times as many pixels as current 1080p HDTV, which brings it closer to the detail level of 15/70 mm IMAX.[4][13][14] NHK advocates the 8K UHDTV format with 22.2 surround sound as Super Hi-Vision.555
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. December 2014 @ 17:25
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Senior Member
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16. December 2014 @ 20:58 |
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The one you call 4K as you say is actually a 2K.
no !?
P.S.
What I see:
This TV makers want to use the higher # as a marketing tool.
Just saying.
Live Free or Die.
The rule above all the rules is: Survive !
Capitalism: Funnel most of the $$$ to the already rich.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. December 2014 @ 21:04
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Interestx
Senior Member
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21. December 2014 @ 16:55 |
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Originally posted by Mrguss: The one you call 4K as you say is actually a 2K.
no !?
P.S.
What I see:
This TV makers want to use the higher # as a marketing tool.
Just saying.
I agree and I think this is why some will struggle to see the leap over 1080p, yes it's better but it is not the step forward dome might be expecting.
That's why I think it should die a death & be forgotten before it goes too far.
8k will stand out, 4k nothing like so much.
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