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Whats happening with HDTV?
Hi, now that we are in the exciting digital age, when is HDTV coming along?
Maybe we are simply wasting money on new widescreen tv's based on antiquated CRT technology and 256 colours from our digital boxes. I stopped using 256 (8 bit depth)colours on my computer in 1995. Wouldn't it be great if we had 16 bit colour depth from the digital system. |
"Robert Horton" wrote in message ... Hi, now that we are in the exciting digital age, when is HDTV coming along? Maybe we are simply wasting money on new widescreen tv's based on antiquated CRT technology and 256 colours from our digital boxes. I stopped using 256 (8 bit depth)colours on my computer in 1995. Wouldn't it be great if we had 16 bit colour depth from the digital system. The government is having a hard time just to get people to pay £99 for Freeview. Some how the idea of pursuading people to buy new TV's, PVR's etc for HDTV might not go down well in Whitehall. Someone did post that the EU where beginning experiments. Perhaps this is the right approach to share the costs for introducing a HDTV system which only a minority might take up initially , a kind of EuroTV rather than Eurofighter. I can't say I would look forward to watching french TV with subtitles! |
"Robert Horton" wrote in message
... Hi, now that we are in the exciting digital age, when is HDTV coming along? A single HD service would require equivalent bandwidth to a single analogue channel, and since the whole idea is to clear the spectrum this didn't happen, nor is planned, as it stands there isn't even enough bandwidth to provide a decent SD picture. However, euro1080.tv is launching on DSat next year so any progress will be made there, DTT is unlikely to change to any great extent for decades. Maybe we are simply wasting money on new widescreen tv's based on antiquated CRT technology and 256 colours from our digital boxes. I stopped using 256 (8 bit depth)colours on my computer in 1995. Wouldn't it be great if we had 16 bit colour depth from the digital system. That's only for OSD. If you're seeing banding and colour gradients then it's simply down to the lack of bandwidth (Newsnight is about the worst for this). Az. |
"John Russell" wrote in message
news:[email protected] Someone did post that the EU where beginning experiments. Perhaps this is the right approach to share the costs for introducing a HDTV system which only a minority might take up initially , a kind of EuroTV rather than Eurofighter. I can't say I would look forward to watching french TV with subtitles! It was called Eureka-95 HDTV and was getting off the ground around a decade ago, some of the Barcelona '92 Olympics was produced in HD for demonstration. But ultimately it died on its arse along with D2Mac, the then new DVB consortium and various European governments' seemed to learn a lot from this. Az. |
"John Russell" wrote in message ... "Robert Horton" wrote in message ... Hi, now that we are in the exciting digital age, when is HDTV coming along? Maybe we are simply wasting money on new widescreen tv's based on antiquated CRT technology and 256 colours from our digital boxes. I stopped using 256 (8 bit depth)colours on my computer in 1995. Wouldn't it be great if we had 16 bit colour depth from the digital system. The government is having a hard time just to get people to pay £99 for Freeview. Some how the idea of pursuading people to buy new TV's, PVR's etc for HDTV might not go down well in Whitehall. Someone did post that the EU where beginning experiments. Perhaps this is the right approach to share the costs for introducing a HDTV system which only a minority might take up initially , a kind of EuroTV rather than Eurofighter. I can't say I would look forward to watching french TV with subtitles! why do you think it would be subtitled. Surely there would be multiple audio tracks just like there is on DVDs (and Eurosport on satellite) Tim |
hg writes
Only one of the reasons that HDTV is not happening soon is as somebody said earlier that HDTV sets and boxes are too expensive at the moment and one idea that's floating around is that HDTV will be broadcast widely when sets are cheap enough for everyone to afford. This will happen when plasma and other non CRT technology will be as cheap as normal TVs are today. So basically the broadcasters are waiting for the technology to be financially viable and then it'll happen. In the US and Japan they're doing the opposite they're broadcasting now and the pain of upgrading is with the consumer right now. The Australian Government have recently set a requirement for each network to broadcast a minimum number of hours of HDTV programmes (I think it's 20 hours per week to start with). -- Dave |
"tim" wrote in message ... "John Russell" wrote in message ... "Robert Horton" wrote in message ... Hi, now that we are in the exciting digital age, when is HDTV coming along? Maybe we are simply wasting money on new widescreen tv's based on antiquated CRT technology and 256 colours from our digital boxes. I stopped using 256 (8 bit depth)colours on my computer in 1995. Wouldn't it be great if we had 16 bit colour depth from the digital system. The government is having a hard time just to get people to pay £99 for Freeview. Some how the idea of pursuading people to buy new TV's, PVR's etc for HDTV might not go down well in Whitehall. Someone did post that the EU where beginning experiments. Perhaps this is the right approach to share the costs for introducing a HDTV system which only a minority might take up initially , a kind of EuroTV rather than Eurofighter. I can't say I would look forward to watching french TV with subtitles! why do you think it would be subtitled. Surely there would be multiple audio tracks just like there is on DVDs (and Eurosport on satellite) Tim I suppose the real point I was making was the US is a single country with a single language which is a single market in terms of TV. The EU may be a similer size as a market, but it certainly isn't "single" when it comes to TV. We don't want to watch French (or german or italien etc) programms be they subtitled or dubbed. |
John Russell wrote:
I can't say I would look forward to watching french TV with subtitles! Why would you need subtitles for French TV ;-) |
"John Russell" wrote in message
news:[email protected] I suppose the real point I was making was the US is a single country with a single language which is a single market in terms of TV. The EU may be a similer size as a market, but it certainly isn't "single" when it comes to TV. We don't want to watch French (or german or italien etc) programms be they subtitled or dubbed. Not to mention HD in the US has been far from a runaway success with only 250k units shipped over 5 years, obviously the tuner mandate will change that but it's hardly a spontaneous thing. Az. |
"Robert Horton" wrote in message
... Hi, now that we are in the exciting digital age, when is HDTV coming along? Maybe we are simply wasting money on new widescreen tv's based on antiquated CRT technology and 256 colours from our digital boxes. I stopped using 256 (8 bit depth)colours on my computer in 1995. Wouldn't it be great if we had 16 bit colour depth from the digital system. I'm all for HDTV, BUT without bigger TV screens to take advantage of it instead of the bog standard 28"/32" little will be gained, IMO. Mart |
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