On Tue, 15 Nov 2005 07:23:44 +0100 Stefan Lucke stefan@lucke.in-berlin.de wrote:
On Dienstag, 15. November 2005 01:44, Niko Mikkila wrote:
On Mon, 14 Nov 2005 23:49:07 +0000
Luckily the interlaced CRT televisions are being phased out and soon we'll only have nice progressive panels and projectors. Just waiting for the 1080p @ 50Hz broadcasts ;)
Damm, that mode will be 1080i. Interlaced. 25fps with 2 fields. So interlacing vs. deinterlacing starts again :-( .
Indeed, that's why I used the smiley. Considering the advances in lossy video compression techniques, it is really mindboggling that they are still pushing such an ancient motion compressing technique that does more harm than good when used together with the modern compression techniques, not to even mention that the displays are progressive. I know H.264 supports interlacing, but I'm pretty sure it is there only to please the broadcasters and people processing interlaced video, not for actual efficiency reasons.
Well, with digital television standards things change more rapidly than in the analogue age. Once they get HDTV rolling, it may not take too long until 1080p@50fps is technically feasible. Perhaps within 10 years we'll get it through internet -- no DVB cards required. DRM is a bitch though.
-- Niko Mikkilä