shouamabane
Member
Great. I hate streaming video.
Netflix doesn't use Blu-Rays.At CES 2015 the Netflix CPO stated that Sony had promised a hardware revision for the PS4 that would support 4K and HDR.
Two things, Jeff:
1. Why would Sony say this (if the current PS4 wasn't capable)
2. Why would they tell Netflix
Here is the original article that mentions it : http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/01/12/tv-hdr-4k-ces-2015-netflix_n_6455936.html
But that's what I'm saying, sales of all disc formats have been falling for a long time and even BluRay itself is nothing like as successful as DVD was. Streaming has permanently altered the way people consume that sort of media.
The question I often hear about PS4/XBone in terms of media playback isn't:
"does it play BluRay discs?",
its almost always:
"How is Netflix on it?"
That's just anecdotal, but it indicates to me that the days of physical discs are coming to an end. Beyond 4K BD, does anyone see the big media groups trying for one more after this?
Netflix doesn't use Blu-Rays.
4K content streaming != 4k Blu-Ray support.
Physical discs will continue to exist for quite a bit of time, don't worry about that.But that's what I'm saying, sales of all disc formats have been falling for a long time and even BluRay itself is nothing like as successful as DVD was. Streaming has permanently altered the way people consume that sort of media.
The question I often hear about PS4/XBone in terms of media playback isn't:
"does it play BluRay discs?",
its almost always:
"How is Netflix on it?"
That's just anecdotal, but it indicates to me that the days of physical discs are coming to an end. Beyond 4K BD, does anyone see the big media groups trying for one more after this?
SkyQ should be launching soon in the UK and apparently Sky's trying to share the same box technology between regions.That's funny, I just spent my lunch hour lurking around at our nearby Saturn shop where I had a closer look at all those 4k TVs.
I really asked myself what's the actual benefit for that extra 4k money (compared to FullHD), since there is literaly no native 4k material available in Germany. No Blu-Rays, no PS4 games, no Sky 4k channel.
4k on PS4 would be a good start.
Physical discs will continue to exist for quite a bit of time, don't worry about that.
This about the need for the patent. If the case is a 4K blu-ray disk's third layer can't be read by a standard blu-ray drive then there is no need for the patent. This is the logic I understood for the patent.
A blu-ray drive can be firmware updated with the Panasonic tweak which allows a layer to go from 25 to 33 GB and the third layer just requires again software on modern drives. The information in each successive layer is always in the stream, what is required is focus of the laser for the lower layer and a strong enough laser to have the reflected signal detectable (phase changed 1/2 wavelength, which with pits when added to the original lasers phase cancels out to give a 0).
"..a new version will create problems with disc drive devices that are already commercially available (hereinafter called the Ver. 1.0 drives)... in a case where recording and playback of a Ver. 2.0 disc are done on a Ver. 1.0 drive, there is concern that recording errors and playback errors would occur with greater frequency. "
"..if the second version recording medium is loaded into the incompatible playback device, it can be put into a state in which it cannot be accessed (recording and playback are impossible).
...to make only the second version recording medium unusable in the known recording device and the known playback device, making it possible to avoid the occurrence of an unstable operating state. "
Hope your right Jeff, though I think anyone who follows the 4K development would kind of guessed this, it would have been a serious flaw for Sony not to put support in from the start. They just dont talk about it yet because whats the point? There is nothing other than TVs they can sell it on at the moment.
I am currently up scaling my PS4 to 4K (works a treat, people underestimate the clarity it brings) and the mastered in 4K movies I do own (Elysium/Angels & Demons) look great with an expanded colour pallet. However Im bursting for proper 4K content to come out on Blu-Ray, I dont want to keep buying 1080p movies that I know I will eventually replace with 4K, just like I did with DVD to Blu-Ray.
No it dosent comfirm anything.I'm more interested in 4k streaming, tbh.
Does this thread confirms 4k streaming as well?
If you understand what is required for DRM and 4K blu-ray it's a 100% confirmation.
1) It's a custom chip not a HDMI 1.4 chip. Everyone who says it's a HDMI 1.4 chip has no confirmation of that as it's not listed in the Panasonic web site. Why Custom? combine with the exposed traces and it's OBVIOUS! It's at the same time an elegant solution and is more secure.
There is so much miss-information and it's not self correcting...
Netflix doesn't use Blu-Rays.
4K content streaming != 4k Blu-Ray support.
Meh. Doesn't matter right now. I feel like the HDCP 2.2 thing might get revised or the restriction lifted. They've been selling 4k tvs for at least two years and many don't even support HDCP 2.2. This is also true of AV receivers and graphics cards. If you want to upgrade you're basically having to replace all of your equipment and I don't think content producers will be able to make a dent with the majority of consumers until probably 2018.
Again, 4K blu-ray disks are standard blu-ray with a Panasonic tweak and three layers.Can't follow the technical side of your point but my reading of the said patent is as follows.
Problem the patent is trying to solve:
Which I take it to mean:
- ver 1.0 drives might be able to read/write on ver 2.0 discs, but with significant problems
- thus the need to make ver 2.0 discs completely incompatible with ver 1.0 drives
So the logic of the patent seems to me as, make ver 2.0 discs completely unreadable/unwritable on ver 1.0 drives to avoid incompatibility issues altogether.
Honestly I don't know when that content is coming. Every film I've worked on in the last few years was delivered to the clients in HD. Even the original full aperture scans were only 2048x1556.
Content wise, 4k TVs are a bigger bust then 3d in my opinion (we still do native 3d films in house).
The issue isn't really how they were shot but how they were finished. If you shoot at, say, 5K (or, as rare as it is anymore, on film) but do all your post-production work in 2K, then 2K is as good as it gets (without the enormous cost of essentially reconstructing the entire movie). Pre-DI-era catalog titles do have it better, but 2K is still the most common workflow there when remastering.Aren't a lot of digitally shot movies shot at 4K? Also aren't movies shot on film higher resolution than 4K anyway due to the crazy high resolution of film?
The issue isn't really how they were shot but how they were finished. If you shoot at, say, 5K (or, as rare as it is anymore, on film) but do all your post-production work in 2K, then 2K is as good as it gets (without the enormous cost of essentially reconstructing the entire movie).
Shockingly few movies these days are finished in 4K, and a lot of what you'll see on UHD BD will have to be upscaled. Even massively budgeted movies like The Hobbit series still have 2K DIs.
The 4K output requirements are still the same.
It's a mix. Life of Pi, for instance, comes with a bunch of 4K TVs, but the bulk of the movie was shot natively at 2.8K, and it has a 2K digital intermediate. That's not to say that the 4K presentation won't look better -- there's more to Ultra HD than just resolution -- but no, it's not really 4K.But there are quite a few movies out for 4K already, are these just upscales?
It was sort of the opposite problem. HD was an inevitability everyone was prepared for well in advance, but the biggest hiccup is that a lot of HD masters were created in the early part of the DVD era and just don't hold up.When we transitioned to blu-ray they re-released a lot of old movies at the new resolution, did these old movies not face the same issue?
I agree, but that is unfortunately the case.I guess I'm just struggling to believe that the movie industry is going to have hardly anything to show or sell at native 4K...
Makes sense to me. We know very, very little about UHD BD. We have zero title announcements, no firm release date, and not even a publicly-seen prototype shown playing actual material (for something supposedly about to hit stores in a few months!). I have no idea if existing PS4 models will be updated to play UHD BD titles, but even if that is on the horizon, an announcement predating...well, nearly every possible announcement of UHD BD seems very premature.I suppose strategic timing would be the only real explanation. But I'm not sure that makes sense.
So a 4K blu-ray disk movie is unreadable on a standard blu-ray player. Where is the need for the patent?
Basically, because the Blu-ray Disc format is the same, recording and playing back a Ver. 2.0 disc on a Ver. 1.0 drive would not be absolutely impossible. However, if the Ver. 2.0 disc is achieved by using higher density and more layers, it can be assumed that the various types of specifications with which the Ver. 1.0 drive is provided would not the adequate.
Therefore, in a case where recording and playback of a Ver. 2.0 disc are done on a Ver. 1.0 drive, there is concern that recording errors and playback errors would occur with greater frequency.
Sony has not mentioned one word about Vidipath or Sony Passage being used for a Downloadable Security scheme so that Cable cards are not needed and a USB tuner connected to a PS4 as all that would be needed to receive encrypted Premium Cable TV. But it's in PDFs Sony sent to the FCC DSTAC.I love Jeff Rigby threads, even if I rarely understand them.
What happened wth that DLNA stuff btw?
This confirms the XB1 and PS4 will be streaming 4K media in the home. Vidipath DTCP-IP using WMDRM10 can stream 1080i and lower resolutions but 4K requires Playready 3 and Playready nd."The game console, acting as a PlayReady ND transmitter, has obtained a license from the service and it sends media files to valid PlayReady ND receivers that are part of the same in-home network. It also uses PlayReady technologies to build and issue local licenses to authorized receiving devices. Note that this model can also be applied to both live streams, video-on-demand and DVR content."
I wonder how many years it will be before 4k actually hits mainstream. Like, with TV cable boxes actually outputting the high resolution/Blu Rays having "Watch in 4k" on the box.
You're feeling strangely confident despite not really having much confirmation or information about it. How is the PS4 going to read triple-layer 4KBD discs, exactly.
Note that the post is from the Moderator of the Blu-ray Forum He fails to post the DRM requirements and for Windows 10 = Playready 3, HDMI 2.0 port with HDCP 2.2 and HEVC codec. All these are supported in the PS4 as it has a ARM TEE SoC as Southbridge which is a hardware requirement for Playready 3.http://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread.php?t=256623 said:I've been informed that PC's will not require new Blu-ray drives to playback 4k media/bluray. PC's will only need software that supports 4K (PowerDVD 14 already does this). So we have it then....
I know I'm not crazy. When the PS4 was in its late stage of development, there were mentions that it would have 4k support. I'm confident it will via a firmware update ala 3D.
I'm not doubting what prerich is saying there at all, but blu-ray.com is an enthusiast site, and moderators there do not speak for the BDA.Note that the post is from the Moderator of the Blu-ray Forum
Did the PS3 Slim ever receive any functionality upgrades for HDMI? Because it had a similar (exposed) custom chip for HDMI: http://www.psdevwiki.com/ps3/MN8647091
Was there even anything they could have updated? If not, why would they choose a chip like this in the PS3?