pick a choice... all? well.. ok....

Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
But you don't have to spend $8000 to see proper display of interlaced footage on a livingroom TV.Uppsala BildTeknik wrote: Ummm, yeah. I don´t know anyone who has spent $8000 on a livingroom TV.
Not at all. We both agree that the more you spend, the more likely it is that you will get proper display of interlaced video. However, your previous position was that it was inherently impossible to have proper display of interlaced video, regardless of price, because you felt that all flatscreens are progessive only and will deinterlace any interlaced footage and make it look progressive. That is incorrect.Uppsala BildTeknik wrote:I guess we have different perspectives about it.
I understand fine. But what you consider a "living room TV" and what others might consider such aren't necessarily limited to the lowest common denominator. Still, you don't have to spend a lot of money to have good interlaced display. And the whole point of this discussion was your previous statement that using an interlaced pulldown pattern would be pointless in the future since all flatscreens will be deinterlacing the image and making it progressive. Your use of the term "deinterlacing" was incorrect because even the cheapest flatscreens do not do this and, as you yourself noted, more and more are going to true interlaced display. So the obvious trend is that interlaced displays will be around for quite a while.Uppsala BildTeknik wrote:They are not only different frpm the perspective of budget, the difference is also where you can find them (at least I cannot fins any broadcast monitprs in the local electronic chains. I can find lots of regular LCD TVs though, but no broadcast quality TVs).
I am talking about "normal TVs", not top-dollar-TVs or broadcast-grade stuff.
Just regular TVs. And those still somehow need to de-interlace the signal because they cannot show the fields one-by-one. How can you not understand this? :?
No, but that doesen´t normally include professional broadcast monitors either. ;)MovieStuff wrote:But what you consider a "living room TV" and what others might consider such aren't necessarily limited to the lowest common denominator.
Sure, but I never talked about good interlaced playback, I talked about true interlaced playback (as in one field, then the next, then the next, and so on.), I never heard of true interlaced playback on flatscreens beforre the mentioning of broadcast monitors here.MovieStuff wrote:Still, you don't have to spend a lot of money to have good interlaced display.
well, as i never had a 24P DVX model in my own hands, it's hard to argue your hard facts.. all i can say is that the 25P model *has* full resolution in progressive mode (and doesnt do any fake deinterlacing)..MovieStuff wrote:No this has nothing to do with removing pulldown. If you use the DVX100a in the 30p mode, which does not require pulldown removal, it has the same lower resolution, though the documentation says that it has true progressive scan capability without interpolation. I have worked with it and several other DVX units on other projects and they all act the same.
the V1 is CMOS as is the EX1, both of which do true progressive. but just for the record, the HVX is CCD and i have done green screen work with some HVX 30P material that was clearly progressive.Does the new Sony V1 use CCDs or CMOS chip sets?
well, it depends a bit on what we consider proper interlaced playback..MovieStuff wrote: I know plenty of people that spend $3000-$8000 on LCD displays for the living room that emulate interlaced display just fine. As I have repeatedly said, whether you get proper display of interlaced imagery is dependent on the budget but there is nothing that is inherent in flatscreens that prevents you from being able to view interlaced footage; only budget limitations.
What I consider proper interlaced playback is anything that has the familiar, smooth motion characteristics of interlaced playback, regardless of how it is achieved. But what they don't do is make anything shot interlaced look like it was shot on a progressive scan camera. To me, that's the main thing in contention here.christoph wrote:well, it depends a bit on what we consider proper interlaced playback.....MovieStuff wrote: I know plenty of people that spend $3000-$8000 on LCD displays for the living room that emulate interlaced display just fine. As I have repeatedly said, whether you get proper display of interlaced imagery is dependent on the budget but there is nothing that is inherent in flatscreens that prevents you from being able to view interlaced footage; only budget limitations.
i've done *a lot* of tests with different deinterlacing algorithms, from very basic field doubling, over field interpolation, field blurring to very advanced adaptive or time mapped deinterlacers (i even built one myself in shake :).. all of them have their disadvantages :/S8 Booster wrote:cristoph... just a curiosity question... the early versions of compressors for the mac (AP NLEs) obviously tried to take advantage of the "no moving" areas in the images . it tried to freeze or "recycle" the no motion pixels to keep the bitrate as low as possible.
is this totally eliminated with the new compressors?
or else not a lot of artifacts will appear i guess.
well, by this definition, most of todays decent consumer LCDs TV will indeed do "proper interlaced playback".MovieStuff wrote:What I consider proper interlaced playback is anything that has the familiar, smooth motion characteristics of interlaced playback, regardless of how it is achieved.
Exactly. See Angus' post previously.christoph wrote:well, by this definition, most of todays decent consumer LCDs TV will indeed do "proper interlaced playback".MovieStuff wrote:What I consider proper interlaced playback is anything that has the familiar, smooth motion characteristics of interlaced playback, regardless of how it is achieved.
I never said they did nor do I really care how they do it. I said that you can see proper interlaced display and that interlaced footage looks smooth like it should compared to progressive scan footage. However they do it, what they do NOT do is deinterlace like a NLE and change interlaced footage to fake progressive scan like a Z1U.christoph wrote: it's just that they don't really do it by actually displaying interlaced lines ;)
actually that's exactly what they do, only at twice the the frame rate, ie 59.94 instead of 29.97fps...MovieStuff wrote:I never said they did nor do I really care how they do it. I said that you can see proper interlaced display and that interlaced footage looks smooth like it should compared to progressive scan footage. However they do it, what they do NOT do is deinterlace like a NLE and change interlaced footage to fake progressive scan like a Z1U.
christoph wrote:actually that's exactly what they do, only at twice the the frame rate, ie 59.94 instead of 29.97fps...MovieStuff wrote:I never said they did nor do I really care how they do it. I said that you can see proper interlaced display and that interlaced footage looks smooth like it should compared to progressive scan footage. However they do it, what they do NOT do is deinterlace like a NLE and change interlaced footage to fake progressive scan like a Z1U.
Well that's all that matters..... ;)christoph wrote: so in that respect, kent is right saying that a consumer LCD monitor can't do true interlaced playback, and you are right in saying that it looks as smooth as an interlaced CRT TV.
and so everybody is happy (including me ;)
++ c.
Haha, isn´t that the perfect end of an arguement/discussion!christoph wrote:so in that respect, kent is right saying that a consumer LCD monitor can't do true interlaced playback, and you are right in saying that it looks as smooth as an interlaced CRT TV.
and so everybody is happy (including me ;)
++ c.