HD DirecTiVo And Other CES Treats
Gadget Guy writes "The CEA (Consumer Electronics Association) has announced their CES (Consumer Electronics Show) Innovations 2004 winners. Within is a shot of the new Hughes HD DirecTiVo with some new LED's on the front including "Temp" for those sure to be occurring overheats. The surprise winners were the Motorola IM Free with no backlight along with it's "left un-justified" keyboard and the color SideKick who's black and white cousin was debuted at the 2003 CES show. Plus check out this Samsung DLP TV! Stealth bomber cool!"
Wasn't one of the cool promises of a flat plasma TV that we could hang them on the wall with little wasted space? Not have to ballance them on top of a space wasting cousing of R2-D2? Who in the world wants this TV with it's queer makeover and awkward space wasting base?
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
"Your mind sees approximately 22-30 frames per second." - I hope you mean motion blured frames per second, since otherwise you can easily see the difference between 30fps and 60 fps and up to ~72fps.
Will an HDTV DirecTivo function exactly as my current original-generation Tivo in terms of letting me watch any show I recorded, i.e., are these affected by the broadcast flag stuff? Will it provide component video outputs and an optical audio output such I can watch those programs on the HDTV I bought three years ago?
If the answer is yes, I'll certainly buy one.
What has *science* done?!? -- Dr. Weird (ATHF)
"...and got dual tuners before most of the public"
Dual tuners have been available for gen1 and gen2 DTiVos for a LONG time. I think it was v 2.5.2 of the software that added them. Any DTiVo bought in the last 1.5+ years came out of the box with this feature.
"I havn't looked into DirecTV's specs about their broadcast of HDTV, but..."
Then don't comment. There are plenty of people who are very happy with the DTV HDTV broadcast.
"I've ran out of space due to the recent influx of some MTV over TiVo exlusive to DirecTV crap programming/previews."
There is reserved space on your HD. The paid content (yellow star items) does not use any of your available space and will not EVER delete any previously recorded programs.
Bottom line, this is a well disguised troll. Anyone who is savvy enough to install new HDs in their TiVo would know that this guy's full of shit.
So, I wonder what pets think of our modern video and audio systems?
Pets probably think modern video and audio systems don't smell very interesting.
Little Debian: America's #1 Snack Distro!
There was a report on the news about cats and tv. They were distinguishing why some cats watch and some cats do not watch.
The answer? The cats that watch TV have slower brains then the cats that do not watch TV. They cannot distinguish that TV is not real.
I'm guessing the same is true for dogs. Especially in regards to sound. It's interesting that some dogs can distinguish that hearing a doorbell or dog bark on TV is fake and some dogs cannot. So, higher quality audio and video probably means that in the end, more pets will watch and listen.
"BEHOLD, CORN!!" - Dr. Weird, ATHF
The problem with your position on 1080i is that many of your 720p "advantages" are due to the limits of today's technology.
- Today's sets can't show full 1920
- Today's cameras can't shoot full 1920
- Interlaced to progressive conversion is expensive
- Digitizing progressive is easier
While these statements are true today, in 5 years these problems will be be solved. They are technology limits.
Approximating the recovery of interlaced fields is simply a technology problem, not a mathematical limit. We throw away these fields as a compression technique, to compliment the other techniques used in MPEG2. Recovering an approximation should be as accepted and accurate as the color-depth recovery that we employ with JPEG and MPEG decompression filtering.
What won't change is that at the same bit-rate, the higher resolution interlaced fields have the potential to look sharper than the lower resolution progressive frames.
Good motion compensated de-interlacing can make interlaced fields look smooth, and these systems will be cheap enough to include in every set in 5 to 10 years. As far as I know, no such solution exists to enhance the lack of resolution. (Yes, I know sharpness filters exists, but the results are poor, and they are not typically sought as a solution to video problems. Maybe these will get better too, but I doubt it.)
I'm sure most people would agree that if we had been stuck with something like 320p vs. 480i for NTSC, that we would have been living with poorer quality images for the last two decades, once image processing had reached the limits of the format.
Fortunately, ATSC wisely accomodates multiple formats.
Dave
P.S. Most of today's sets are not natively progressive scan, but are still built with tubes. I agree this is rapidly changing, but tubes still have the picture quality edge. I'm betting on nano-tube cathode displays as the best replacement for direct-view tubes.