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The Trouble With 4K TV

An anonymous reader sends this quote from an article about the difficulties in bringing so-called '4K resolution' video — 3840x2160 — to consumers. "Though 4K resolutions represent the next step in high-definition video, standards for the format have yet to emerge and no one’s really figured out how to distribute video, with its massive file footprint, efficiently and cost effectively. How exactly does one distribute files that can run to hundreds of gigabytes? ... Given that uncompressed 4K footage has a bit-rate of about 600MB/s, and even the fastest solid-state drives operate at only about 500MB/s, compression isn’t merely likely, it’s necessary. ... Kotsaftis says manufacturers will probably begin shipping and promoting larger TVs. 'In coming years, 50-inch or 55-inch screens will have become the sort of standard that 40-inch TVs are now. To exploit 4K, you need a larger form factor. You’re just not going to notice enough of a difference on smaller screens.' The same quality/convenience argument leads him to believe that physical media for 4K content will struggle to gain traction among consumers. '4K implies going back to physical media. Even over the Internet, it’s going to require massive files and, given the choice, most people would happily settle for a 720p or 1080p file anyway.'"

35 of 442 comments (clear)

  1. cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it and that's on the broadcast side.

    Maybe 1-2 channels but most cable systems are loaded with sd channels and old mpeg2 HD boxes.

    Sat has moved to all mepg 4 HD but stills has lots of SD boxes out there as well.

    1. Re: cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, because there is no readily accessible source of 1080p content..

    2. Re: cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it by RoboRay · · Score: 4, Informative

      Show me an interlaced digital display. Seriously. Show me one.

    3. Re:cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it by timeOday · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Mea culpa, I was confusing it with megapixels. Still, 3840x2160 is not very much higher than on the 15" retinal display.

    4. Re:cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it by sg_oneill · · Score: 4, Informative

      Its the term used at the production side, and is pretty much the standard for pro video at the high end. And its notorious for being really hard and expensive to work with because its simply taxing for the cameras to output and even more taxing to work through post-production with. Something like a RED or whatever camera will sell themselves on "4K" but generally unless filming for cinema its hardly needed.

      With one exception however, when dealing with chromakeying and the like the higher resolution provides more information to key out backgrounds without the telltale green halos around the characters, so even on TV work, 4K cameras are idea for special effects stuff, just to give the post-production work more to work with.

      Which is, of course, why those newfangled DSLR cameras might look seriously fantastic for normal footage, but are simply the wrong choice for special effects stuff because whilst the effect of compressing it all down might be acceptable for most video, it removes too much detail for chromakeying without a lot of (expensive) extra work in post production. With that said, for DIY amateur stuff, its not time thats the problem but gear and so people are able to spend more time getting keying right and working with looser tolerances.

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    5. Re:cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 3, Informative

      OTA gives 19 Mbps to each channel, usually split into 3 stations. So 20 for a single 4x channel sounds about right.

      OTA uses MPEG-2, and (in my experience) for a good, decent 1080i signal, between 12-15 Mb/s is required, before things look a bit blurry. I do have an OTA EyeTV setup, with a 1080p monitor, and I can quite easily see the bitrates.
      Ironically, I've taken to streaming my PBS shows, because although my downstream bandwidth is a mere fraction of a full ATSC stream, the image quality is far superior to what is possible with a 9 Mb/s "720p" sub channel.
      For Bluray, 25 Mb/s AVC is very common, and that doesn't include the lossless audio. It's in another league entirely, provided that the grain hasn't been scrubbed out of existence. (Pan's Labyrinth isn't realistic, though it is shiny)

      More efficient coding standards may help cut the bandwidth requirements quite severely, but at a certain point, you'll have to decide that you just don't care about image quality. And that sort of attitude won't sell 4k screens.

    6. Re:cable and sat don't have the bandwidth for it by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here in the Netherlands they are laying fiber to most homes. At the moment they are only doing cities and towns, so I'm not getting any yet (I live 1km from the closest town. This is quite far by Dutch standards), but in cities and towns people are getting fiber.
      Once the fiber is there the 4K shouldn't be a problem. Replace the old neighborhood boxes with streaming servers and harddisks and just pull the 4K data from there. Then the connection between the main switches and the neighborhood boxes isn't as heavily taxed and the real internet can still be fast.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
  2. Welcome back to 2005 by XPeter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The same thing happened when the first 1080P screens came out. The market will adapt, there's no problem here.

    --
    "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits" - Albert Einstein
    1. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by mug+funky · · Score: 4, Interesting

      the problem is that HD is still more than is needed, and a fair amount of programming is still made for SD (and most still broadcast in SD).

      broadcast facilities dragged their feet with HD adoption - the single factor that made all facilities HD capable was the move away from hardware to software and masters-on-HDD.

      so no... the market didn't adapt in 2005, it didn't adapt in 2010, it hasn't adapted now and it will be a long time before anything other than big budget movies or events like the olympics will get the 4k treatment.

      also consider the optimum viewing distance of 2.5 screen heights. if Jobs were still here, he'd stop at 2k and call it "retina television". unless you're doing it well wrong, you're not going to get much benefit. even the jump from SD to HD was marginal - most of the gains were in compression quality (a macroblock is harder to see when it's 1/4 the size, and in h.264 it's impossible to see as it's filtered out by design).

      but i suppose 4k will be interesting for perving on individual audience members at sporting events...

    2. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by neokushan · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'm calling bullshit. The summary talks about uncompressed video, glancing over the fact that even 1080p uncompressed requires a bitrate of 190 MBytes/s (at 24FPS) - faster than most HDD's can handle. Storage space required? 667Gb per HOUR, or a solid TB for a 90min film. Do you need a massive SSD to play 1080p files? Do you even need an SSD to edit and encode them? No, you don't.

      Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncompressed_video#1080i_and_1080p_HDTV_RGB_.284:4:4.29_uncompressed

      Compression has always been essential, even for DVD. Uncompressed SD videos would still fill a dual-layer blu-ray (50GB) after about 30mins. Yes, we'll need better CODECS to handle 4k and yes a lot of work needs to be done, but the size of uncompressed video isn't and never has been the issue. At worst, it'll take a slightly newer disk format (I don't see why a 4-layer Blu-ray disk - which exists today, couldn't do the job) and better internet connections to stream.

      Devices will be released THIS YEAR capable of outputting 4k - just look at Tegra 4, or nVidia's SHIELD, which has been demonstrated live supplying a 4K TV (Admittedly, probably up-scaled content, but obviously the technology is there today).

      The real issue is content, in that nothing is really in 4K right now. The transportation and storage method is not.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    3. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by neokushan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly, it's just early days and all this doom and gloom about the format is ridiculous. I remember when 1080p video started appearing and I tried playing a sample on my AMD 3400+ processor - of course, it skipped and jumped all over the place. The file was also huge, my paltry 2Mbit internet connection took ages downloading it and my monitor was too small to display it properly. It was excessive, took up a lot of space and required fast, new hardware. How could such a thing ever catch on?!

      Oh easy, this is technology and technology constantly moves forward. If you're the kind of person that has ever complained about having a quad-core processor in your phone as "unnecessary", then please hand in your geek card and get off slashdot. Technology always moves forward, things always get better and nothing will stop that. There is never a "Good enough", things can always be done faster or with less power.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    4. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by Malc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is the year of HEVC/H.265, which is expected to give birate improvements for the same quality of up to 50% compared with AVC/H.264. Expect to see content in this format later in the year.

      Ultimately though you're right: without 4K content there'll be little demand. Upscaling 1080p will only go so far.

    5. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by hawguy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      even the jump from SD to HD was marginal

      Holy shit, and this is how you know that you have no idea what you're talking about. The difference of SD to HD was more significant by far than the change from black and white to color. It's huge! Do you have a 10" tv that you're watching from 7 ft away when making this comparison or something?

      Are you old enough to remember the B&W TV days? I think you're underestimating the scale of the switch from B&W to color. I still remember when my parents got a color TV (we had a B&W set far longer than most people) and the difference was amazing and quite apparent to everyone. It didn't take a side by side comparison to see the difference between B&W and color, and you could see the difference no matter the size of the screen or how close you were.

      On my current 37" LCD (capable of 720p, 1080i), I notice only a minimal difference between SD DVD's (480i) and HD Blu-rays. The difference is so minimal that I stopped paying the extra dollar or two for Blu-ray disks from Netflix because I couldn't really tell the difference. Perhaps if I had a bigger 1080p capable set I might notice more of a difference, but at my normal viewing distance (10 - 12 feet) the difference is quite minimal on my current set. I don't think I'd notice any difference at all between 720p and 4K without a much larger TV, or sitting much closer to the TV.

      This chart doesn't go up to 4K, but suggests that you'd have to sit closer than 10 feet away from a 100" screen to take advantage of even 1440p:

      http://www.engadget.com/2006/12/09/1080p-charted-viewing-distance-to-screen-size/

    6. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by aXis100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      also consider the optimum viewing distance of 2.5 screen heights. if Jobs were still here, he'd stop at 2k and call it "retina television". unless you're doing it well wrong, you're not going to get much benefit. even the jump from SD to HD was marginal - most of the gains were in compression quality (a macroblock is harder to see when it's 1/4 the size, and in h.264 it's impossible to see as it's filtered out by design).

      I thought the jump from SD to HD was great....for a while. Lately most of the free to air TV channels in Australia have been going terribly downhill with overly compressed or badly up-scaled video sources. It's rare now to get HD content that looks like HD - the best thing I've watched lately was a 3 year old doco I had saved on hard drive.

      Which then begs the question, why go to 4K when we cant even get 1080p right consistently?

    7. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by wilson_c · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not sure that's true. 1080p had always been the goal of HD, even with the original HD spec developed in Japan in the 80s. No matter what, everyone knew we were going to get there and understood the advantages over NTSC and PAL. Consumers and content creators could see the improvements brought by HD. Most of the people who cared about 1080p just waited until prices dropped and skipped 720p and 1080i. That all occurred as part of the big HD uptake over the past 5 years.

      The problems with 4k are twofold. First, it isn't part of the existing HD spec. It is a new standard that doesn't have the imprimatur of governments and cable companies designating it as a target to be achieved. Second, it is a move driven entirely by the consumer electronics industry. There isn't demand from users and there is certainly no interest on the production side.

      I work in post production and the data hassles of 3D have been enough to keep our company (and many others) away from it. The substantially larger file sizes associated with 4K are even worse. For a production company like ours, we'd have to move to a petabyte SAN just to manage an equivalent amount of 4K footage to what we do now in HD. Transcoding times would go through the roof, bandwidth would be heavily taxed, even the hardware requirements for decoding a single compressed stream (to say nothing of editors handling MANY simultaneous streams) for playback would be much higher. And for what? The only quality improvements would be in resolution (as opposed to the jump to HD, which brought a massive change to color handling over NTSC). Networks don't want to pay higher budgets for something that won't help make them any more competitive. Satellite providers, who already compress the shit out of their HD signals, don't have spare bandwidth for fatter streams. Cable companies, who are basically in the data business now, don't want to waste their bandwidth on it. Even with SDV it would add a lot to their overhead. Game consoles are still struggling to make the most out of HD, so are nowhere near ready to handle that many additional pixels. You might have videophiles willing to spend a ton of money on ultra-premium gear, but even they would be limited to using specialty playback hardware that would have to download massive files because 4k exceeds the storage capacity of any commercially available blu-ray media.

      TV manufacturers are pushing this because the great upgrade is over and 3D has failed to excite consumers. They need something to try and convince consumers to replace a perfectly functional, nearly new 1080p TV. So they're going to run with 4K in 2013.

    8. Re:Welcome back to 2005 by cas2000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't give a damn about 4K TV but i want it to become stupidly popular because a 4K TV LCD panel is also a 4K computer monitor, and mainstream purchases of 1080p TVs are why 1080p monitors are less than half the price of 16:10 1920x1200 monitors.

      "good enough for TV" is a huge limiting factor on the affordability of high-resolution monitors, so if the plebs think they need 4K to watch TV then that's just fabulous.

  3. And don't forget.. by Striikerr · · Score: 5, Informative

    .. the cable companies would compress the signal as they presently do with "HDTV" to the point that it looks like crap. They have ruined the HDTV quality with this compression and I can only imagine how much they would ruin 4k TV content. The best HDTV experience I have ever had was pulling HDTV signals from the Over The Air broadcasts. The first time I saw this (after spending so much time watching compressed HDTV on Comcast) I couldn't believe how great it looked. If you don't believe me, give it a try. The OTA HDTV signals blow Comcast's HDTV signals out of the water with crispness and detail.
    Hopefully the means of getting this type of signal dramatically improves so that compression is not needed and we can watch 4k the way it was meant to be..

  4. Re:I have no problem.... by viperidaenz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The CD is over 30 years old, you can still buy CD players.

  5. Re:what about... by viperidaenz · · Score: 5, Funny

    We've still got 636k to go then!

  6. Mis-guided claims.. by thesupraman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Much of the bandwidth/media etc claims are rubbish. 4k has (approximately) 4 time the pixels of standard full HD, so at most a given
    format will increase by 4 times, HOWEVER, most lossy compression methods (for example AVC/MPEG4) on real footage scale better
    than linear with pixel count, as detail becomes more repeated at higher resolutions, so a more likely estimate for such formats is
    2 times, which is not crazy (blueray for example can already delivery that for many movies if needed). newer compression methods are
    coming on line that can deliver close to double the compression for equivalent quality, meaning we end up back to normal HD data sizes.

    Is it needed? thats a whole different story, with the size of living rooms/available and comfortable wall space for screen, etc it is pretty
    marginal, but trying to use raw uncompressed bitrates as a scare tactic is rubbish.

    Their raw figures are of course not even right as they seem to be assuming 444/12bit storage, which would be rather rare in real life, 422 10 bit
    would be MUCH more common, and most workflows would actually use comrpessed storage (as they do now for HD.).

  7. Internet speed does make a difference by jd659 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    “Even over the Internet, it’s going to require massive files” While this is true, the speed of the Internet connection makes a huge difference. Unfortunately for the US population, the market is divided among a couple of companies and the slow speeds are offered at bank-robbery prices (e.g. 25/3Mbps for $50). Many countries in Europe get a faster and cheaper connection (e.g. 75/50Mbps for $10) and that changes how people watch TV. With TVs that can play MPEGs directly off some network connected HDD and a laptop that can download any torrents to that HDD, the experience of watching a show is often:
    1. Find a torrent on a laptop and click on it to start downloading.
    2. Wait a couple of minutes.
    3. Navigate TV to the specific file on HDD and start watching.

    It is amazing how much the experience changes for the better with faster connection speeds and more reasonable laws on downloading/uploading the content.

    --
    There's no such thing as "illegal download"
  8. 4K is so 2007. 8K is already here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    4K is so 2007, I have seen 8K broadcast streets (all equipment needed to acquire, store, transmit, compress, scale, playback and display) for years as shown at the international broadcasting conference.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Hi-Vision_television

    Before anyone comes up with, "but the eyes cannot resolve that kind of details", YOU ARE WRONG!
    8K is not even a little comparable to HDTV.

    I have also seen 4K being displayed, often scanned from 35mm prints, I doesn't have much impact beyond 2K. But this may be due that this is not captured on a digital camera and the grain (effective resolution) of 35 mm is worse than pixels at 4K. The 8K footage I've seen was captured on a 8K digital camera.

    Also 300 fps video is freaking amazing, this was a demo from the BBC, your eyes can track fast moving objects and therefor focus on it razer sharp like when you track a moving object in the real-world. Finally we can actually watch Hollywood action sequences which as 24 fps is just a blurry mess of motion blur, or a vomit inducing slideshow.

  9. A station wagon full of Betamax tapes. by An+dochasac · · Score: 4, Funny

    Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of Betamax tapes. Analog of course.

  10. The benefit of 4K TV by White+Flame · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If they do crank these out, 4K computer monitors should come down in price. I don't care what happens to the TV market as long as that happens.

  11. Who cares, this is not the important point! by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The important point is that at last, there'll be computer screens with non-stupid resolutions again! They took my 1920x1200 away, and though I would prefer 3840x2400, I can live with 3840x2160.

    At least resolutions are going up again.

  12. Bigger problem. Visually irrelevant by guidryp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Remember when Blu Ray came out and a number of people were claiming they couldn't see much difference.

    Well this time it will actually be true for almost everyone.

    Most people don't even have their TV's close enough to visually discern 1080p.

    This kind of TV resolution is irrelevant in a normal home setup.

  13. Compression, of course. Even for 4K 3D (sic!) by Moskit · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Pity that submitter/editor did not research further into the topic.

    There are already standards (JPEG2000 DCI) that allow to compress 4K stream from about 5Gbit/s to 250 Mbit/s, which is much more manageable. There is at least one commercial vendor (intoPIX) that makes such hardware de/compressors.

    If you want to stretch your imagination - start thinking about 3D movies in 4K, which is quite an obvious step. This is 12 Gbit/s uncompressed, but 500 Mbit/s in normal transmission.

    Oh, by the way - 8K is already being worked on. And 8K 3D (48Gbit/s uncompressed)...

  14. I'm working at CES this year. by zerofoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm working the Samsung booth at CES this year and I worked it last year. When I saw the engineers (last year) assembling the 4k demo sets, I asked where the content was coming from. The answer was a half-rack of servers behind the wall filled with powerful machines and lots of disks. Clearly not practical for consumers.

    This year, the 4k sets are being driven by slightly smaller computers, presumably with compression. Samsung is demoing their compression technology (HEVC) VS h.264. I'm sure the manufacturers know that with the sorry state of networks, 4K video is not possible without more advanced compression algorithms to reduce data rates.

  15. Re:Who Wants This? by W2IRT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In who's mind is 2K good enough for theatres? Speaking as a former motion picture projectionist who ran 35mm and 70mm film for almost 20 years, I can tell you the "quality" you get in a 2K auditorium is significantly inferior to what was delivered by a 35mm print, albeit with no jitter or weave. 4K cinematic presentations are actually quite good, even on a 40 or 50 foot screen but I steadfastly refuse to see anything in a theatre that's shown in the 2K format. What's worse, most exhibitors run their 2k machines with the 3D lenses in place when they're not showing 3D, cutting the available light in half. So what the vast majority of patrons experience in a movie theatre today is a dark, washed-out image with lower overall quality than they were seeing just 5 years ago. The only winners here are the companies who don't have to ship 12,000 feet of film (for a 2 hour movie), which weighs about 40-50 pounds per print, to 2000 screens -- and pay to ship it back again at the end of the run. The exhibitors also win because they got the 2k machines for free from the companies and they don't have to employ skilled projectionists to run them either.

    So yeah, I'll take 4K home presentation once the price comes down to the level that mere mortals can afford. I have a 53" Aquos screen now that's OK at 9' viewing distance but a 65" class screen at 4K and using HFR would rock my world once content becomes available.

    My bet is that flat panel manufacturers are quickly realizing that 3D in the home is a dud and they'll concentrate their efforts into amping up 4K in the coming years, even though content will be quite minimal for a very long time. Since you'll never see anything more than 1080i or 720p from OTA broadcast (6 MHz channel size ain't changing any time soon), it'll only be a selling point for movies or DVDs of TV series. I don't know about everyone else, but 95% of what I watch is broadcast TV dramas, comedies and sports. I don't see the studios converting to shoot and edit to 4k in the foreseeable future, either.

    --
    Cheers, Peter, W2IRT
  16. Well past the biological limit by petes_PoV · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The basic problem with Ultra-HD is that nobody can see it. You'd have to be sitting so close to the screen to appreciate the difference (from "normal" HD) that your eyes couldn't see the whole screen. Add on to that. that the data stream would be so highly compressed to fit into the available bandwidth that the only difference would be the resolution of the artifacts. What you have is the video equivalent of an audio bandwidth extending into the 100's of kHz. great for any dogs listening, or eagles watching your TV, but utterly pointless for humans, unless their motivation is so immature that they feel the need to have something impractically better than the guy next door's, no matter what the cost - or usefulness.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
  17. Use the panels for 1080P Passive 3D by Dastardly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The more interesting step to me would be 1920x2160 panels for 1080P passive 3D. Right now passive 3D polarizes alternate lines so at 1080P it is more like 1920x540 per eye. Which probably is perceived by the brain like 1920x700 or something like that. If no one makes a 1920x2160 panel I presume it could be done with a 4K panel.

  18. What is the issue? by Gription · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article proclaims FUD. This is just silliness. The data requirements ARE NOT 600mbps just as 1080p's data requirements are not 150mbps.

    Digital television is ALWAYS compressed.

    It will require 4 times the data throughput as it is only 4 times as many pixels. Period. There isn't a downside. If it is only getting a 1080p signal then it will be at least that good and you know that they will have a lot of processing to anti alias the upscaled image. It will probably really help on 3D movies where they are cheesing out by cutting the vertical resolution in half.
    The only issue will be getting the infrastructure caught up with it. The cable companies may have a problem but if they don't take care of it they will go the way of the buggy whip because the Internet and Netflix will scale to take care of it.

    The only real issue that 4K may have is if it makes enough visual difference that anyone will care enough to pay the premium. I really think the only place it will really noticeably shine is 3D. We will just need to see how fast meaningful 3D content becomes available. And with the limitations on how much 3D content you should reasonably watch in a day that will slow the "need" for it.

    1. Re:What is the issue? by Lachlan+Hunt · · Score: 3, Informative

      The article said 600 MB/s, not "Mbps". There is a difference. The former is megabytes per second, the latter is megabits per second. And, yes, it does.

      3840*2160 = 8294400 px/frame

      Colour depth is 24 bits per pixel

      And either 24, 25 or 30 frames per second, depening on whether it's native film rate, or adjusted for PAL or NTSC. In either case, the calculation is:

      3840*2160 px/frame * 24 bit/px * 24 frame/s = 4,777,574,400 bits/s = 4.78 Gb/s or around 597.2 MB/s

      It's obviously more for the higher frame rates.

      --
      By reading this signature, you hereby agree with the content of the above comment.
  19. Not so much resolution... by djbckr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think I'd rather see a higher frame rate. When I was watching "The Hobbit" I really enjoyed the HFR but I was thinking to myself that the rate needs to be even higher still. No less than 60, I would say...

  20. Re:What is the issue? Obsolete already? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well, I'll just wait for the 640K TV. That should be enough for anybody.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.