christoph wrote:saying this is a film in HD doesnt mean it's in theatrical quality, just means that it's in either 720p, 1080i or 1080p.. the camera that it was shot with, the recording medium used, aand the way it was handled in post will all affect how it looks.
to use matt's example: a cinealta recorded to HDV will look better than a Z1U recorded to a uncompressed 10bit 4:4:4 1080i file (unless you're doing greenscreen i guess)
Okay, I got it now. However, much of this seems to be splitting hairs, in terms of what the terms "HD" and "HDV"
mean to people when trying to talk about hi-def video. When someone says, "This is HDV we're talking about, not HD", I don't think there is anything confusing about that statement at all, since it depends on the perception (though a technical mis-perception, perhaps) that HD denotes a higher quality than HDV. Certainly, if someone were talking about making a theatrical feature on "film", your first thought would not be that they were shooting 8mm or even 16mm. There would be a natural assumption they were shooting 35mm. Conversely, someone promoting telecine transfers to "HD" would be remiss if they did not reveal they could only really transfer to HDV within the operating resolution provided by something generally associated with HDV, such as a Sony HVRZ1U or FX1, etc. Thus there is an unconscious link between resolution and the terms HD and HDV, regardless of any technical common ground.
Regarding such, Mattias wrote:
mattias wrote:it's because when they hear hd they think of the cinealta and when they hear hdv they think of the z1. fair enough, but it's not the truth.
It's the truth as they understand it based on a distinction promoted by the industry to differentiate between expected results. As Christoph pointed out, HDV was developed as a personal form of HD but has never really be promoted as being
as good as HD. This distinction isn't something the consumers came up with but, rather, the industry itself.
mattias wrote:there are already higher end cameras that record in the hdv format as well as prosumer ones that record in higher end formats like dvcpro. so in layman's terms even if what you're saying happens to be true now it won't in just a very short while.
But is it true now? I guess that's really the issue (if there is one). I mean, I can remember when Sony was trying to take advantage of confusion over the terms "Beta". There was Betamax and there was also Betacam, both of which used the exact same tape stock and shell. Endless ads promoted Betamax as simply "Beta" because that is how professionals shooting Betacam referred to their format and Sony exploited this misperception to the max. I just find it interesting the this same industry doesn't try to pass HDV off as HD, especially if they share far more common ground technically than Betamax and Betacam ever did!
But thanks for the info, Mattias, Christoph, David and everyone else. This is certainly a lot for an old analog fart like me to digest.
Roger