IrishNinja
Member
Plasma failed because of burn in.
literally hasn't been a problem with high quality sets in forever now
what sucks is pioneer and panasonic are basically done with them, and they were (my opinion) some of the best ones out, easily
Plasma failed because of burn in.
literally hasn't been a problem with high quality sets in forever now
Think the general populous doesn't know this. I can't remember the last time I heard anything about a plasma screen outside of places like this that wasn't immediately followed by some mention of burn in.
This is some weird alternate history. People bought LCDs en masse because they were big, thin, and flat. To get big CRT you have to go fat and heavy; to get a flat CRT you have to fuck up the geometry; you can't get a thin CRT. It helped that everyone was in the market for a new TV anyway due to HD.
Without that demand LCDs would have gone nowhere.
Last spring, Samsung apparently decided not to pursue OLED, drastically cutting its investment in the technology."OLED panel production is still very difficult," says Paul Gagnon, an analyst at NPD DisplaySearch.
“I have always said it would take two to three years to consider OLED TV. But now when little progress has been made on its tricky production and high costs since our suspension back in 2013, I wouldn’t say OLED is our future direction,” he told reporters at the company’s headquarters in Suwon, Gyeonggi Province.
OLED boasts more accurate and vibrant picture quality compared to conventional liquid-crystal displays. Despite its increasing usage in smartphones and other smaller devices, its TV adoption has been delayed due to the higher costs of production and lower manufacturing yields of the larger panels.
Yes, of course a shitty low end LCD will look shitty. My disagreement is with CRT handling of non-native res material being supposedly inherently better. The reality is that there are HDTVs that handle non native res content brilliantly and there are also CRTs that do a pretty shitty job with non native res too. It's probably not as pervasive as with HDTV tech, but the idea that CRTs absolutely do better is a myth.Yeah, but if you're playing, say, 480p content on an LCD that's 1080p, IQ is going to suffer unless your TV has an amazing built in upscaler.
Also black level is a weakness of LCD, yeah. color accuracy outside of the very lower end is fine on a modern LCD, though.
I don't want to play the quoting game on my phone but OLED is going nowhere because very few people are buying TVs anymore. Everyone bought a new LCD in the last 10 years, theyre not replacing them until they break.
Plasma failed because of burn in.
And 4K is going nowhere because who even cares? 1080p has lots of pixels.
literally hasn't been a problem with high quality sets in forever now
what sucks is pioneer and panasonic are basically done with them, and they were (my opinion) some of the best ones out, easily
None on my 2008 Kuro.
Prices would go down if there was demand and scale to their market. And high prices + weak demand for TVs all around makes that hard.As to OLED not catching on... people are still buying LCD in droves, in the form of new LED TVs, IPS monitors, portable devices and smartphones. That OLED has not caught on because people aren't buying anymore is downright false.
Ah okay, totally misinterpreted your comment, my bad.Yes, of course a shitty low end LCD will look shitty. My disagreement is with CRT handling of non-native res material being supposedly inherently better. The reality is that there are HDTVs that handle non native res content brilliantly and there are also CRTs that do a pretty shitty job with non native res too. It's probably not as pervasive as with HDTV tech, but the idea that CRTs absolutely do better is a myth.
Yeah, exactly. Plasma is pretty closely tied with the idea of burn in, regardless of if the units actually have the issue. Even now when I hear plasma that's what I think of, and I consider myself pretty well educated on these things.And yet if you ask your coworkers what they know about plasma? First words out of their mouth will be burn-in.
Even when its not permanent significant image retention is a huge turnoff for normals -- nobody wants to do any kind of burn-in mitigation.
And yet if you ask your coworkers what they know about plasma? First words out of their mouth will be burn-in.
Even when its not permanent significant image retention is a huge turnoff for normals -- nobody wants to do any kind of burn-in mitigation.
Plasma and burn-in is the equivalent of the XBone with the original digital plans. the initial damage was so big that it was never fixed despite things being reversed over time.
I have secretely turned off all of my relatives tv's nasty post processing either without telling them or just without saying anything. "Oh can I see the remote a sec? ...here we go.... Okay all good"yeah, i realize sheepy is arguing why they didn't take the tech further, not the actual quality/reality of it...it's true, most folks just went with a cheaper LCD & factory floor settings and called it a day
how many of ya'll are at friends/family/diners etc and see movies/etc with that stock soap opera filter on? fucksake, im not nearly as bad as a lotta dudes on the AVS forum, but that shit is turrible
I'll be honest, I'm hoping all current technologies fail. It's a bummer that Plasma had to go, and LED, OLED... they ain't shit as far as either a real leap forward and/or a suitable replacement. Manufacturers are going to have to roll out a clear leap forward in display technology to get enthusiasts and the general public excited and ready to open their wallets. Perhaps even something that isn't constrained to physical living room space? IDK... but it better damn well not have the weaknesses of current technology.
I disagree with "4K is going nowhere" though. I mean it's not exactly flying off the shelves, but resolution is only going to go up and will probably only plateau once we hit 8k.
He said "as far as IQ goes, they most definitely are superior to LCD", which it is. There are other factors besides "sharpness" that form the basis of a screen's perceived level of quality to our eyes. The two most important ones are black levels (contrast) and color accuracy.
CRTs have their faults, no question, but as far as IQ goes, they most definitely are superior to LCD.
a fixed pixel display can look just as sharp or sharper than a CRT. You lost me.
I'm seriously constantly cruising Craigslist and eBay for a local Sony G90 projector, cheap. There are some I can buy now but they are too far away. In the next couple of years I'm going to have CRT front projection of 80-120" and a projector that can run everything from 240p to 1080p natively and which even has HDMI input cards available.
There's been a lot of civil back and forth. Maybe take a break from the thread if it bugs you so much. I'm not seeing a reason to get so worked up, especially since the general tone (and content) of the discussion was well beyond "X > Y and fuck you if you disagree."
Not sure why you singled out my post among the couple of dozen arguing merits on each side. I only raised CRT's contrast and color superiority over most display types as a clarifying point to NormalFish assuming that Shadow was talking about mere sharpness:
Framemeister ain't bad (though it has its flaws) but the CRT path is much more superior.
Toslink mods are very obscure as well as very few outside of the SNES. N64 is a good example. I've seen no toslink mods for it what so ever, but there is an HDMI mod. HDMI mods will only become more common and will eventually be available for most if not all consoles. I don't expect that kind of proliferation for stand alone digital audio mods.
There is no point* in an audio mod in consoles with a synthesizer chip, that takes ROM data and makes triangle and square waves out of it. The sound output is so specific to each chip that you have to essentially emulate them to get digital out. With an FPGA audio chip and an FPGA video chip for digital output, you have to wonder why even using original hardware. It's more interesting, and authentic, to tap the audio at the chip output and drive it to an amp with proper cabling to avoid any contamination that could happen on the PCB or in poorly made AV cables.
For CD-based consoles however it's much more interesting. There is a proper DAC to convert digital CD music (and then everything else) to analogue, and that's easy to bypass to give to a modern, better DAC that would give you a potentially better sound. On a PS1 it's as easy as hijacking a few pins, on the Saturn it's a slightly more involved mod but nothing that can't be done.
* There is, specifically in an HDMI mod, as HDMI demands digital audio. But as a standalone? Eh.
I just find posts like this (and its just one example in this thread)
passively aggressive stating of opinion as if it was fact. It's a constant thing in this thread. Where the first word in the thread is downplayed from the elitist crt enthusiasts.
I think it's annoying and I think I have a right to mention that, if people have the right to say it on nearly every page of the thread. You know without being told to leave the thread.
Just skip reading posts. For example, I skip any posts where someome mentions capturing.I didn't meant that you need to leave. Sometimes it's good to take a step back when things get heated and come back with a clearer head. Although not in this thread, I have done it before myself.
Just skip reading posts. For example, I skip any posts where someome mentions capturing.
I skip all posts from juniors
Just skip reading posts. For example, I skip any posts where someome mentions capturing.
What's wrong with capturing?Just skip reading posts. For example, I skip any posts where someome mentions capturing.
Zero interest in it.What's wrong with capturing?
On multiple occasions I've seen gaffers get perma-juniored for saying stuff like this.
I personally love it!!! Then again I'm a youtuber so that has something to do with it.Zero interest in it.
being facetious I promise
Nice try. Your anti-junior agenda has been noted and the appropriate mods have been contacted.
meant to reply to this! first, i need to dig up that pic of my set & find out the model #, then how to access the service menu!
ive no controller, is that usually needed for this? i could sort out a universal one, in a pinch
My response to your post was just about what IQ things that are the most important are going to vary from person to person.
The rest of it was dialed at the thread in general.
I just find posts like this (and its just one example in this thread)
passively aggressive stating of opinion as if it was fact. It's a constant thing in this thread. Where the first word in the thread is downplayed from the elitist crt enthusiasts.
I think it's annoying and I think I have a right to mention that, if people have the right to say it on nearly every page of the thread. You know without being told to leave the thread.
Plasma burn in was eradicated years ago.
literally hasn't been a problem with high quality sets in forever now
Plasma and burn-in is the equivalent of the XBone with the original digital plans. the initial damage was so big that it was never fixed despite things being reversed over time.
Actually we can change the land, and have. And yes tech is the answer, but it's earlier than you realize in tech history, and always will be. The flaws in some tech that you believe are inherent are not necessarily so, this has been shown again and again throughout history. Plenty of eminent scientists have egg on their face saying this or that will never be possible through this or that tech. The market has to be allowed to choose the best solution at any given time according to the current situation, which can change. That situation is both the natural resources as well as our ability to change them, it's all constantly in flux.We're not farmers. We have no control over the tending of the land. The landscape is locked in. We can walk on it. We can even plant seeds. Yet, we can never change the topography or composition. That part is unchangable as the inherent flaws in certain HDTV technologies. An LED bulb is easy to manufacture, requires minimal circuitry, is made of easily recyclable materials, is more resilient than either incandescent or florescent, and is still vastly more efficient. Heck, you can touch it bare handed even whe it has been on for hours. It is truly superior. Sometimes, only a different technology is the answer.
Actually we can change the land, and have. And yes tech is the answer, but it's earlier than you realize in tech history, and always will be. The flaws in some tech that you believe are inherent are not necessarily so, this has been shown again and again throughout history. Plenty of eminent scientists have egg on their face saying this or that will never be possible through this or that tech. The market has to be allowed to choose the best solution at any given time according to the current situation, which can change. That situation is both the natural resources as well as our ability to change them, it's all constantly in flux.
Print this out and keep it on your wall for 50 years please.A florescent can't be made as efficient as an LED in all aspects. An LED damn near produces a current by itself because of its inherent properties. Those properties being silicon that is abundantly available and less damaging to the environment. That's simply not the case with fluorescents. Ina fluorescent, a rather complex circuit is required. Maybe the toxic elements inside could be replaced with something less hazardous, but the fact still remains that the bulb is more wasteful in total material. The market isn't some omnipotent phenom that can magically overcome physical reality.
Print this out and keep it on your wall for 50 years please.
Put these right next to it.I'll put this convo right next to my collection of Jesus returning on X date collection.
Don't use RGB if you don't have an RGB cable, stick with ypbpr.Plugged my ps2 in for the first time in a while and noticed something odd using the component cables. I saw this static line that slowly went from the bottom to the top of the TV. My guess is that it's the cord I'm using as i don't think it's Sony branded, has anyone has this issue before?
Also what video out should I select on the ps2 main menu? I noticed there was y pbpr and rgb but when I selected rgb I had no signal on my TV.
Using a newer Sony bravia 42 inch by the way for my TV.
Don't use RGB if you don't have an RGB cable, stick with ypbpr.
Here. These work perfectly with the PS2 as I own one BTW.Yeah it didn't even output in rgb so I changed back. The picture quality looks good it's just that static line that's bit annoying. Looks like cable degradation. Anyone have a link to where I can buy an official ps2 component cable? Lots of places seem to sell 3rd parties as legit.