Oh I don't know about that. I think you could drop a large 8K in a house and sit a little closer for an in house IMAX experience (except with a sharp image) and that would be pretty sweet.8K is pointless in home systems, unless you are rocking a 300" screen then maybe, but for the other 99.999% 4K is more than enough, I wish the whole 8K movement would die off right now
Oh I don't know about that. I think you could drop a large 8K in a house and sit a little closer for an in house IMAX experience (except with a sharp image) and that would be pretty sweet.
The SNES biggest bottleneck was CPU which was fixed by putting coprocessor on cartridges.If we went back to cartridges I would buy more physical games, easy to put in and chances of damage were minimal.
Greed killed the BR for me. 4k movies cost 4-10 euros more than the normal BR edition. Isnt it the same disc?
Crystal balls
Archival Disc, but got cancelled
Archival Disc - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
This is basically holographic storage, right?Chinese researchers shrink data centre storage capacity into DVD-sized disk
In world first, researchers use 3D optical data storage architecture to reach petabit level capacity.www.scmp.com
But the video quality is significantly worse than blu-ray..
Something for enthusiasts, something has to fill that void in time. Or just remain 4K Blu - sort of like vinyl.
Less stock, higher prices, particular group of people seeking them out.
I have a dedicated Home Theater. If im serious about watching a movie- A disc is the ONLY way to go.
8k movies would fit on Blu-ray specGonna go full circle : back to cassette tapes.
When 8K really gets pushed for movies....is that when we hear about what comes next?
Thread closed.Blu-Ray 2
But the video quality is significantly worse than blu-ray..
That's a great idea, I like it. But I'd like to add something to the concept: What about people store these DRM-free, digital files on physical discs for the convenience of storing the films inside a cabinet? Some might even make money from burning these files to discs for others, putting them in nice plastic boxes and wrapping some cool artwork for the films around it. The future is bright.The future of Blu-ray should be DRM-free digital files, or otherwise, digital files that somehow guarantee that you won't lose access to the content.