Friday, October 19th 2012

Consumer Electronics Industry Announces Ultra High-Definition

The next generation of so-called "4K" high-definition display technology for the home - giant-screen TVs with more than eight million pixels of resolution, four times the resolution of today's high-definition televisions - will be called "Ultra High-Definition" or "Ultra HD," connoting its superiority over conventional HDTV, according to the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA).

CEA's Board of Industry Leaders unanimously voted yesterday to endorse the consensus opinion of CEA's "4K" Working Group recommending the term "Ultra High-Definition" and related performance attributes. The name and related minimum performance characteristics are designed to help consumers and retailers understand the attributes of this next generation of superior television and display technology beginning to roll out this fall. The vote came during the Board's meeting at CEA's annual CEO Summit and Board Retreat held here through Friday.

The Working Group, now known as the CEA Ultra HD Working Group, was formed earlier this year to bring a wide array of stakeholders together to discuss how best to define and educate consumers about this new technology.

"Ultra HD is the next natural step forward in display technologies, offering consumers an incredibly immersive viewing experience with outstanding new levels of picture quality," said Gary Shapiro, president and CEO, CEA. "This new terminology and the recommended attributes will help consumers navigate the marketplace to find the TV that best meets their needs."

The consumer electronics industry's new designation for Ultra HD products was the result of extensive consumer research conducted by CEA's market research group. "Ultra HD" consistently rated highest in terms of helping consumers understand the technology and in communicating the technology's superior viewing experience.

The group also defined the core characteristics of Ultra High-Definition TVs, monitors and projectors for the home. Minimum performance attributes include display resolution of at least eight million active pixels, with at least 3,840 horizontally and at least 2,160 vertically. Displays will have an aspect ratio with width to height of at least 16 X 9. To use the Ultra HD label, display products will require at least one digital input capable of carrying and presenting native 4K format video from this input at full 3840 x 2160 resolution without relying solely on up-converting.

"Under CEA's leadership, the Ultra HD Working Group spent the majority of the summer meeting and discussing how to bring this technology to market," said CEA Ultra HD Working Group Chairman Gary Yacoubian, president and CEO of Specialty Technology/SVS. "We discussed and debated two important steps, the name and recommended attributes, in a forum that allowed a variety of key stakeholders, manufacturers, retailers, broadcasters and Hollywood professionals to lend their voices. As we educate and raise awareness among consumers, I look forward to working with our robust committee to pave the way for a successful rollout of Ultra HD."

"TVs remain highly sought after and were the second most frequently mentioned device on consumer wish lists this holiday season, behind only tablets," said Shapiro. "There has never been a greater time to be a consumer of televisions and displays. You can select from a wide array of choices offering outstanding high-definition picture quality, an amazing 3D experience, and interconnectivity within and outside of the home. And now we are proud to present Ultra HD for those consumers who want tomorrow's next-generation of displays and televisions, today."

Ultra HD technology will be prominently displayed at the upcoming 2013 International CES, the world's largest and most important annual consumer technology trade show, which will be held January 8-11, 2013, in Las Vegas.
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35 Comments on Consumer Electronics Industry Announces Ultra High-Definition

#26
_Zod_
Nice and all except for good luck finding any content at those resolutions to display. We will be stuck with 1080i broadcast in the U.S. for the foreseeable future with the cable\telco companies compressing the crap out of the data on top of it.

Even if the studios created such content, there is no storage medium to put that much data on, so we need Blue-Ray 2.0 as well.
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#27
Peter1986C
Probably not BD 2.0, but flash based storage (with some write support, hopefully, so that bookmarks can be set, or passwords in case of content your chidren better don't watch). Optical tech will beciome too slow at some point.
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#28
Prima.Vera
_Zod_Nice and all except for good luck finding any content at those resolutions to display. We will be stuck with 1080i broadcast in the U.S. for the foreseeable future with the cable\telco companies compressing the crap out of the data on top of it.

Even if the studios created such content, there is no storage medium to put that much data on, so we need Blue-Ray 2.0 as well.
Agree. Except maybe Japan, where they are doing some tests with 4K TV for an year now, the rest of the countries didn't even fully implement yet HD TV. Heck, the countries that have Full 1080p HD TV can be counted with 1 hand fingers, the rest are still in the process of implementing 720p or 1080i TV channels. Probably the PC market will evolve much faster, but I don't see any time soon 4K monitors with normal price. We need some breakthrough on GPU department also. Running a game on that native resolution today is a fast slide show at best...;)
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#29
pr0n Inspector
_Zod_Nice and all except for good luck finding any content at those resolutions to display. We will be stuck with 1080i broadcast in the U.S. for the foreseeable future with the cable\telco companies compressing the crap out of the data on top of it.

Even if the studios created such content, there is no storage medium to put that much data on, so we need Blue-Ray 2.0 as well.
Full size DSLR porn pics.
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#30
xBruce88x
yea even the 1080 signals from comcast look like their from a lower quality online streaming server. soo many squares... esp in darker scenes... though I think my friend has his tv's settings wrong

overall i'm not impressed with digital tv... looks too much like low quality hulu videos most of the time.
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#31
Prima.Vera
xBruce88xyea even the 1080 signals from comcast look like their from a lower quality online streaming server. soo many squares... esp in darker scenes... though I think my friend has his tv's settings wrong

overall i'm not impressed with digital tv... looks too much like low quality hulu videos most of the time.
Neeh, is the TV signal. Because there are so many channels they need to highly compress the signal, also some channels are even 720i as I discovered with my tuner...:nutkick: Is simple, just compare the quality of a BluRay movie with the ones from a HD TV station. The difference is enormous!:banghead:
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#32
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
I don't normally advocate for XBox when it comes to gaguing high-def because the 360 usually upsamples 720p to 1080p rather than rendering the game in full 1080p. Geometry Wars 2 is one of the few games that does run full 1080p and between the quality and the brightness it will show you what high def on a high contrast ratio display really can do. Playing it on an LCD vs a Plasma is night and day alone, resolution is clearly obvious in Geometry Wars 2 imho.

I also agree with movies, the quality of Bluray can be vastly superior to that of cable. However some channels are better than others as Prima.Vera stated.

Geometry Wars: Retro Evolved 2
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#33
xBruce88x
Prima.VeraNeeh, is the TV signal. Because there are so many channels they need to highly compress the signal, also some channels are even 720i as I discovered with my tuner...:nutkick: Is simple, just compare the quality of a BluRay movie with the ones from a HD TV station. The difference is enormous!:banghead:
true... there is a big difference. He still has his settings off a bit though... he's in love with that tru-motion crap... It's cool when it works but its kinda messes up the image when it can't keep up with the action. also... his contrast settings are too bright lol. but I guess he likes it that way so i don't say anything. at least he turns off the tru-motion when gaming. (ps3 and his pc when playing star wars the old republic)
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#34
Covert_Death
that is a nice jump!

wish they had gone with HD 3.0 as mentioned above... numbers ALWAYS work better than throwing adajectives infront of things. whats next. Super Ultra HD and then Super Duper Ultra HD?

a number scheme would have worked much better
Posted on Reply
#35
Nordic
Covert_Deaththat is a nice jump!

wish they had gone with HD 3.0 as mentioned above... numbers ALWAYS work better than throwing adajectives infront of things. whats next. Super Ultra HD and then Super Duper Ultra HD?

a number scheme would have worked much better
If they had gone that route they could say hd 3.0 3d content
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