Netherscourge
Banned
Change the OT to the "PS4K" and you're all set.
Microsoft said in 2013 that the Xbox One would support a format years off on the horizon, and they haven't uttered a word about it since. I don't put a lot of stock in a statement that far past its sell-by date. UHD BD as it was envisioned as being in 2013 may not resemble the product of 2016 as closely as they expected. If it's imminent and inevitable, why is neither camp reaffirming support?Adam's post above seems to imply that Microsoft insuring the XB1 hardware can support UHD Blu-ray in 2013 has no bearing on their implementing it due to the long time since the XB1 was released.
4K blu ray stands as much chance in the market as SACD - it'll be niche at best. It might be different if the format was backwards compatible (e.g. both resolutions residing on different layers that their respective players could see) but it isn't.
I don't see Sony making any effort to support the format in the existing PS4 hardware and even if a PS 4.5 appears it is no guarantee they'll bother there either. It depends if the cost of implementing the hardware encumbers every device with an expense that they hope to recoup. I guess we'll see.
You can't set 2160p30 through the PDM, but PlayMemories forces it with an in-app option.You cannot set the ps4 to display at 3840x2160 in any way, shape, or form. If you are looking at a 4k photo or video through the media player, the TV still has the ps4 set at 1080p.
So, currently, the ps4 does not support 4k, PERIOD.
The first UHD BD player and a couple dozen discs are already on store shelves. (I have two discs in-hand myself!)I see absolutely no possibility of them not putting UHD support in their console as soon as UHD BR's hit the market
"PERIOD"? Relax, buddy. It supports HDMI 1.4a which means that via HDMI it supports 4k. That it is currently not possible doesn't mean it's not technically possible. Still the HDMI output limits the 4k possibility to just render images other than anything useful for animated pictures.
You can't set 2160p30 through the PDM, but PlayMemories forces it with an in-app option.
The UI is upscaled but photos and thumbnail previews aren't.
The first UHD BD player and a couple dozen discs are already on store shelves. (I have two discs in-hand myself!)
Really? You dont see Sony doing UHD in PS4/4.5? The same company that launched PS3 for about half the cost of a Blu Ray player? Sony has the means, motive, and mindshare to push UHD just like BR, I see absolutely no possibility of them not putting UHD support in their console as soon as UHD BR's hit the market
Morbid curiosity. I've been reading FF comics for decades, and I felt compelled to watch this one even knowing what a complete misfire it'd be. FoxConnect had (well, still does) a pretty good deal going that brought the disc down to $18 and change shipped, and that was good enough for me.Why's that piece of shit on the right on your counter?
I didn't say UHD, I said Blu Ray Ultra HD. Implementing 4K video is considerably easier since it could be H264 streamed and doesn't require any hardware modifications. I expect PS4s will support 4K streaming over Netflix and similar services. Supporting a hardware format with the additional expense and testing required is another matter. Maybe they will in 4.5, or maybe they won't. It's extremely unlikely the existing PS4 is capable of supporting the format.
Like I was saying...To me it seems like PS4 as a console is 4K ready, but it may not happen due to the bluray lens not ready for it.
We may see PS4K, a newer slim-like revision which may play it, making this technically correct.
The first UHD BD player and a couple dozen discs are already on store shelves. (I have two discs in-hand myself!)
No, the UI is upscaled but the photo content is native res.I said currently, not that it isn't possible. I stand corrected because of playmemories.
The playmemories piece is interesting. So just the playmemories ui is in 4k, but not the photos themselves?
Adam, when Microsoft and Sony announce support for Playready ND, Playready Embedded with OS software to support UHD Blu-ray will depend on what they feel is necessary for them to make money and not alienate their partners.Microsoft said in 2013 that the Xbox One would support a format years off on the horizon, and they haven't uttered a word about it since. I don't put a lot of stock in a statement that far past its sell-by date. UHD BD as it was envisioned as being in 2013 may not resemble the product of 2016 as closely as they expected. If it's imminent and inevitable, why is neither camp reaffirming support?
I'm not arguing that Microsoft won't support UHD BD, mind you. I'm just in the camp that the answer is "no" until someone credible says it's "yes", and an answer predating the format by multiple years doesn't count.
Let's recap!The problem here is I am 2 years too early in announcing what is coming and you can't see it.
How do rumors start? What was probably said; Sony promised the PS4 would get 4k blu-ray support at the end of the year [2015]. Is that a Software update or Hardware? One author assumed it was a Hardware update while I've shown the most serious hardware obstacle was HDCP 2.2 for the HDMI port and that has a firmware updatable solution.
I expect Microsoft will announce 4K blu-ray on Windows 10 with standard blu-ray drives provided the Hardware has a newer dGPU or APU with TEE where the HDCP for HDMI 2 takes place. It's already been leaked as to what 4K playing requires but not that standard drives can be used... Microsoft has the October 6th [, 2015] Windows 10 media briefing.
...so you bump it to March.PS4 Firmware update 4.0 to support 4K media in 2016 by March.
...and then you bump it to October 2016 (around a year after your first target).Waiting for Firmware 3.5 features to confirm no Media updates. In which case October with Firmware 4.0 is to support Playstation VR and 4K Media/Vidipath...same OP.
...and that brings us to now. 2 years after the thread was started would put it at Summer 2017.The problem here is I am 2 years too early in announcing what is coming and you can't see it.
The problem here is I am 2 years too early in announcing what is coming and you can't see it.
Yup, I'm almost always wrong about when. I made the assumption that Vidipath would be implemented when the FCC mandated the Cable Companies support it. Then the next 6 month major firmware update then Firmware update 4.0 (October) since 3.5 (March) doesn't appear to support media.Let's recap!
So, your first target was early October 2015 for the Xbox One (for at least the announcement of what's to come) and actual support before the end of 2015 for the PS4.
You also said that Samsung already had its first Ultra HD Blu-ray player on store shelves by last October -- not "coming soon" but "already out as of September 2015" -- with the first wave of discs coming later that month. You weren't even aware about the rather widely publicized announcement that UHD BD was being pushed back to 2016, nevermind the fact that nothing and no one ever said anything about a September or October release in the first place, showing that you don't exactly have your finger on the pulse of things.
...so you bump it to March.
...and then you bump it to October 2016 (around a year after your first target).
...and that brings us to now. 2 years after the thread was started would put it at Summer 2017.
How much further back can you keep moving the goalposts?
HahahahahahahaI cannot stop laughing.
Yup, I'm almost always wrong about when. I made the assumption that Vidipath would be implemented when the FCC mandated the Cable Companies support it. Then the next 6 month major firmware update then Firmware update 4.0 (October) since 3.5 (March) doesn't appear to support media.
If I had dates then I would be an inside source. I only have a roadmap of features found with the reading I've done and I cite those here. The FCC DSTAC downloadable security scheme is in a two year review before it can be mandated, the cable companies can voluntarily implement it at any time. ATSC 3 is due to reach recommend status at the end of this year but will have limited support as TV stations have to switch over from ATSC 1 to ATSC 3.
The role that HD Blu-ray played was to provide media for 1080P and S3D before ATSC 2 was released which would use the blu-ray codec to support higher resolutions and the browser to support XTV. ATSC 2 was never implemented and we are near ATSC 3 release. UHD Blu-ray players are being released that can provide 1080P and 4K media in preparation for ATSC 3 (4K Antenna TV) using HEVC. This time there is IPTV for 1080P and 4K with major cities able to support it. Logically IPTV and UHD Blu-ray come before ATSC 3 which is candidate status by the end of 2016 and the Olympics will be broadcast in Korea by Feb 2018. The FCC road-map tentatively has full switch-over to ATSC 3 and the elimination of ATSC 1 TV stations by 2020. These are Key dates that can be used to guess at when.
There is much discussion about the switch-over date with speculation that it will be accelerated this time and much faster than the NTSC to ATSC analog to digital transition. This is because the FCC has sold and is selling UHD TV spectrum to Cell phone companies and the amount left to the TV industry won't allow for duplicate ATSC and ATSC 3 stations at the same time.
Eurogamer: Independently confirms source that the PS4.5 is real, referred as PS 4K. Likely it's a PS4 slim with sliding top and ships with Firmware 4.0.Not sure what any of this has to do with your original post. You claimed that the regular old launch PS4 would support 4K blu ray discs. It doesn't and it won't. Just admit you're wrong and move on. All of your other gibberish is just making you look like a fool.
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/df-hardware-orbis-unmasked-what-to-expect-from-next-gen-console said:PS4 Additional hardware: GPU-like Compute module, some resources reserved by the OS
"However, there's a fair amount of "secret sauce" in Orbis and we can disclose details on one of the more interesting additions. Paired up with the eight AMD cores, we find a bespoke GPU-like "Compute" module, designed to ease the burden on certain operations. We're assured that this is bespoke hardware that is not a part of the main graphics pipeline but we remain rather mystified by its standalone inclusion, bearing in mind Compute functions could be run off the main graphics cores and that devs could have the option to utilise that power for additional graphical grunt, if they so chose." For the PS4 we know Tensilica DSPs are in the PS4 likely in the ARM Southbridge and maybe Xtensa IVPs.
Durango additional graphics hardware - "rumours have circulated for quite some time that it is some way behind Orbis, but equally there has been the suggestion that the GPU itself is supplemented by additional task-specific hardware. We could not confirm this, but an ex-Microsoft staffer with a prior relationship with the Xbox team says that two of these modules are graphics-related."
...but the entire point of what you're referencing is a new SKU: not the existing PS4.Tweet line 4-6 read like a firmware update to use the GPGPU that was NOT previously accessible to game developers. "The Console will have more power but is primarily for System + Media + VR".
This time we are probably getting a PS4 slim and Firmware 4 at the same time. The PS3 slim launched for less at a time when the PS3 sales were declining. PS4 sales dropped last quarter for the first time....but the entire point of what you're referencing is a new SKU: not the existing PS4.
The title of this thread has made it factually dubious for so long. If anything, the rumor of the PS4K is the strongest counterpoint to the original speculation.
Not really because it could be just the right time to support 4K Blu-ray.
PS4 isn't going to be able to support 60fps 4K so having PS4 as the 1st taste of 4K Blu-rays might have been a bad idea but if they have a PS4 out that can show it in it's full glory it wouldn't be so bad to also support it with the PS4 that's not showing the full story.
Right now 4K Blu-rays are not selling fast enough to make it a big deal so it could just be on the back burner for the FW team but if the PS4.5 kick start the sells like it did for Blu-ray it will be worth the time to go through whatever they have to go through to get it working.
unbelievable goalpost moving, lolThis time we are probably getting a PS4 slim and Firmware 4 at the same time. The PS3 slim launched for less at a time when the PS3 sales were declining. PS4 sales dropped last quarter for the first time.
What part in the PS4 can upgrade "System + Media + VR" without changing the APU which would be expensive for no purpose if it's only slightly more powerful? With ATSC3 reaching candidate status by the end of 2016 means all the standards are in place and those standards are also used for UHD IPTV and Blu-ray.
The thrust of PS4 sales will change from AAA games to casual/AR and Media which have a larger audience.
Yup, you've convinced me with your emotional outburst. Only the launch XB1 will support UHD Blu-ray and the PS4 needs a hardware update. So 60 million PS4s can't support any form of UHD media and the XB1 can support UHD Blu-ray and digital bridge with Playready ND streaming between platforms. Microsoft is King, Patcher was correct and Sony will soon die because they have no vision.unbelievable goalpost moving, lol
stop wasting everyone's time and take your bullshit to a blog
But Microsoft has no UHD Blu-ray software and Sony does: https://www.blu-raydisc.info/licensee-list/flla-rom4-licenseelist.php The companies getting the BD-ROM V.4 License are listedThe Xbox One supports both 3D and 4K Blu-ray discs at present. “There’s no hardware restriction at all,” said Microsoft’s Yusuf Mehdi at the time to Forbes.
That Sony is listed almost everywhere but Microsoft isn't and Sony has a UHD PC application licence means Microsoft Windows 10 platforms including the XB1 will use either Cyberlink, sMedia or Sony PC applications.Media Memory-Tech Holdings Inc., Sonopress GmbH, Sony Corporation, TECHNICOLOR SA
Movie Player/Game Console/Test Player Dongguan Digital AV Technology Corp Funai Electric Co., Panasonic, Samsung Electronics, Sony Corporation
PC Drive Hitachi-LG Data Storage, Inc.
PC Application Software CyberLink Corporation, sMedio, Inc., Sony Corporation
Authoring System Jargon Technologies LLC
Component Socionext, Inc. Sony Corporation, ViXS Systems Inc.
Tools & Manufacturing Equipment/Testers Sony Corporation
Commercial Audiovisual Content Deluxe Media Inc. Panasonic Corporation, Japan, Radius60 Studios LLC, Sony Corporation, TBS SERVICE, INC
What could you be giving up, exactly? What do you hope to accomplish?It only seems so because I don't roll over and give up
Um, you've repeatedly accepted quotes from Microsoft and Sony VPs -- it's just that you cherrypick the ones that meet your predetermined conclusion.or accept just a quote from a Microsoft or Sony VP.
The first UHD BD player and a couple dozen discs are already on store shelves. (I have two discs in-hand myself!)
What is wrong with you? 😁
Yup, you've convinced me with your emotional outburst. Only the launch XB1 will support UHD Blu-ray and the PS4 needs a hardware update. So 60 million PS4s can't support any form of UHD media and the XB1 can support UHD Blu-ray and digital bridge with Playready ND streaming between platforms. Microsoft is King, Patcher was correct and Sony will soon die because they have no vision.
But Microsoft has no UHD Blu-ray software and Sony does: https://www.blu-raydisc.info/licensee-list/flla-rom4-licenseelist.php The companies getting the BD-ROM V.4 License are listed
That Sony is listed almost everywhere but Microsoft isn't and Sony has a UHD PC application licence means Microsoft Windows 10 platforms including the XB1 will use either Cyberlink, sMedia or Sony PC applications.
Won't it be a hoot that the PS4 has no UHD Blu-ray support and Sony provides the UHD Player for the XB1. Sony is supporting UHD media everywhere but in the Launch PS4 while Microsoft could?
The first UHD BD player and a couple dozen discs are already on store shelves. (I have two discs in-hand myself!)
Um, you've repeatedly accepted quotes from Microsoft and Sony VPs -- it's just that you cherrypick the ones that meet your predetermined conclusion.
PS4 sales dropped last quarter for the first time.
Projectors are through the roof, but UHD TVs are pretty reasonably priced these days.How many people here have $30,000 4k projectors to even support this right now?
C'mon, this thread isn't that long. Go back a couple of pages to the whole thing with Masayasu Ito (who leads the engineering side of the PS4) saying that UHD BD support with the launch PS4 isn't possible. There is literally no one at Sony in a greater position of authority to speak on this than him.Why don't you find quotes that state otherwise.
At the end of the day, though, they are Ultra HD Blu-ray discs. Also, UHD BD does have a lot more to offer than resolution.Neither of these are even 'real' 4K blurays
Projectors are through the roof, but UHD TVs are pretty reasonably priced these days.
Im guessing you still have a 480p crt 32 inch tv with bullshit talk like that.I dont get the point of 4k tv. Tvs are too small to have a large gain compared 1080p. Monitors yes ... projectors yes.
Unless you sit directly in front of your tv like 4' away you arent really going to tell the difference.
Im guessing you have a still have a 480p crt 32 inch with bullshit talk like that.
I dont get the point of 4k tv. Tvs are too small to have a large gain compared 1080p. Monitors yes ... projectors yes.
Unless you sit directly in front of your tv like 4' away you arent really going to tell the difference.
Complete nonsense.I dont get the point of 4k tv. Tvs are too small to have a large gain compared 1080p. Monitors yes ... projectors yes.
Unless you sit directly in front of your tv like 4' away you arent really going to tell the difference.
I'm guessing you haven't actually seen any 4K content.
Complete nonsense.
With a 55" at 6' away the difference is obvious. With UHD content everything is on another level, just so pin sharp and clear, there's so much more depth to the image that you find yourself staring at the background at all the detail. Obviously if you're viewing heavily compressed content then the difference isn't going to be anywhere near as obvious.
The other advantage of UHD is how beautifully the upscale both 720p and 1080p content and you lose the horrible obvious screen door effect of native 1080p TVs at 46"+.
I remember all this when HD first launched, people saying they couldn't tell the difference. Some spectacles required methinks.
Sure I have.