The Irrelevance of Ultra HD

CES is about the future of consumer electronics; I get that. We go to see what’s going to make our eyes light up later in the year. But take a glance at our CES 2013 Hub and it’s clear that Ultra HD was the tech most of the big companies were pushing, and it’s arguably the most irrelevant theme to the electronics industry – for the near future, at least – we’ve seen in some years. Not since the very earliest days of 3D have we seen a segment so desperate to validate its own existence, and failing so miserably.

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I can understand why manufacturers like Samsung, Sony, Panasonic, and others push TVs as the perfect vehicle for Ultra HD. They’re huge products – physically speaking – and in the charged, competitive, genital-waving atmosphere of Las Vegas, having The Biggest is a fair way to being seen as having The Best. A vast TV looks great on a stage during your keynote, and it provides a great focus point for gawping visitors to your booth.

Practically, though, when you need a huge set to actually take advantage of the technology you’re positioning as the Next Evolution for home entertainment, you’re already irrelevant to a huge swathe of your audience. The most common size was 84-inches – eighty four! – and they started to look small in comparison to the few 110-inch monsters. Worse still, every company did a grossly poor job telling us why we need Ultra HD, relying on big numbers to sell the technology alone.

That’s why, despite the majestic monsters from the main culprits, it was a far smaller – and quite different – interpretation of 4K that I left CES feeling was the best implementation of the technology. Panasonic’s 20-inch Windows 8 tablet may be a fraction of the size of, say, the company’s own Ultra HD TVs, but for once the 4K context made sense. The detailed resolution would be great for digital artists, Panasonic pointed out, as well as those in medical professions and architects.

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Samsung even hinted at that alternative strategy itself; when Joe Stinziano, the company’s EVP, told us he saw mass-market relevance for Ultra HD perhaps five years out, he highlighted those fields as potential early-adopters, not people with playing field-scale living rooms.

A 20-inch tablet doesn’t leave you with the feeling that you need to wear sunscreen when you’re basking in its glow, however. And CES is perhaps the place where context has no role: we make these things because we can, is the unspoken message from manufacturers, not because you necessarily realized you needed it, or even wanted it. It’s proof of concept without pause for practicality.

And yet… what will they show us in January 2014? When Ultra HD sets are still the stuff of vastly expensive, niche, 84-inch irrelevance – because, let’s face it, 1080p is going to be the beginning and end for 99.999-percent of consumers this year – what will the TV industry wow us with? It’s an arms race of idiocy, when there are still plenty of far more worthy areas of attention (the broadly appalling smart TV performance of most internet-connected sets, for instance) which affect far more people but are just less attention-grabbing than a $20k luxury toy.

For now, though, the message is simple. Don’t worry about Ultra HD. It really doesn’t matter.


The Irrelevance of Ultra HD is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Sony demos Ultra HD whoppers plus prototype 4K media player

Sony hasn’t been left behind in the Ultra HD gush, with its own oversized 4K TVs as well as a concept Ultra HD media player which we’re hoping spawns a commercial version. The company announced a line of up to 84-inch Ultra HD sets at CES this week, including the X9000A series with its prominent speakers taking pride of place around the bezel.

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Sony’s using “4K X-Reality PRO” branding for its Ultra HD models, which start at 55-inches. The 84-inch XBR-84X900A, for instance, has a total of ten speakers, and comes with a One-touch NFC remote which allows for easy pairing and streaming from an Xperia smartphone or tablet.

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As for what that 3840 x 2860 resolution can do, Sony had a display showing a full newspaper spread on a single display, with all the text legible. There’s a close-up shot in the gallery below.

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Unfortunately, the 4K media player is being described as just a prototype for driving Sony’s demo displays here at CES; the company says it has no specific plans to release it. The hatbox-style design does have some history, however; Sony had a range of similarly-shaped VAIO PCs back in 2007.

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Sony demos Ultra HD whoppers plus prototype 4K media player is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Toshiba unveils L9300 series 4K TVs at CES

Toshiba has announced a new series of 4K Ultra HD TVs at CES this week. The new TV series is the L9300 range and promises four times the resolution of full HD TVs on the market today. The new TV line is powered by the proprietary Toshiba CEVO 4K Quad+Dual Core Processor.

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Toshiba says that the L9300 series TVs deliver the highest quality Ultra HD image processing available. The processor inside the TVs is also able to use Resolution Restoration to restore clean and very near ultra HD image quality from content with less than 4K resolution. The TVs also feature color gamut enhancement to improve the intensity of colors.

Toshiba’s L9300 TVs have a 240 Hz refresh rate promising clearer and smoother fast motion video. The TV line also uses the CQ Engine promising superior picture quality controls with Edge Enhancer, Dynamic Gamma, Color Master, and Expert Mode Calibration Capability. The TV also has a new UltraClear Dynamic Noise Reduction feature to create clear images without reducing image detail.

The series of 4K TVs also has advanced Cloud TV functionality offering a connected watching experience. The Cloud TV functionality includes a family calendar to share family events, and personal messaging allowing you to send and receive messages from friends and family. The Cloud TV features also includes a photo album, streaming news, the ability to access content from DLNA-enabled devices, and an integrated TV programming guide with advanced search capabilities. The TV line also has integrated Wi-Fi, Miracast, and WiDi. Toshiba will begin shipping the L9300 4K TVs this summer.


Toshiba unveils L9300 series 4K TVs at CES is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Samsung Announces 85″ and 110″ Ultra HD 4K Televisions

Another day at CES another Ultra HD TV from Korea with Samsung’s with a nice 85 and 110″ model. Announced at around 30,000 USD in the US and £20,000 in Europe these new Ultra HD TVs will come with another world’s first a 1.35Ghz Quad Core CPU, 4 HDMI out, Optical Out and Samsung’s S-Recommendation with Voice controls!

Netflix launches Super HD and 3D; Reveals Ultra HD trial with Samsung

Netflix has launched Super HD, offering a new top-tier of streaming video quality for those on select ISPs, but there’s Ultra HD content in the pipeline thanks to a special partnership with Samsung. Funneled out through Netflix’s Open Connect delivery network direct to ISPs, the Super HD video is even higher quality 1080p than the streaming company offers as standard, with certain 3D titles available in the US. Meanwhile, at CES, Netflix is demonstrating the fruits of its 4K resolution experiments with Samsung.

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Hiding in Samsung’s booth at the show – or at least, as close to hiding as an 85-inch TV can manage – was an Ultra HD set running a 4K stream from Netflix’s servers. There were few details to hand, and no sign of a public launch date, but the picture quality looked great.

Still, it’s Super HD that will be reaching more people – though not everyone – first. Netflix subscribers will need to get their internet connection via one of the ISPs currently working with the media company, a list that includes Cablevision, Virgin Media, British Telecom, Telmex, Telus, TDC, GVT and others.

Everyone else will have to wait, unfortunately, and only those subscribers in the US will get Super 3D content, at least initially. You can find out if you’re on an Open Connect compliant ISP here.


Netflix launches Super HD and 3D; Reveals Ultra HD trial with Samsung is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Netflix 4K Streaming Video Doesn’t Look Very Good Yet

Samsung and Netflix have been working together on a 4K video solution for the Ultra HD world we’re entering. I just saw a demo of some of the 4K streaming content, and it’s horrifying. They’re going to have to work harder to not suck the life out of the video. More »

Thought Samsung’s 85-inch Ultra HD TV was huge? Wait ’til you see the 110-incher…

Samsung’s Ultra HD TV reveal at CES yesterday was certainly impressive, but the company only brought out its “smallest” set to show on stage – there’s a 110-inch behemoth waiting in the wings. Having joked that the larger model – which sits at the top of a three set line-up, with a 95-incher in-between – wouldn’t fit through the doors of the conference hall where it held its opening presentation, Samsung saved the largest Ultra HD for an eye-searing display on its stand.

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The set has the same specifications as the 85-inch model we got up close with yesterday, namely 4k resolution and an array of speakers embedded in the easel-style stand. It’s far more dominating, however, somehow making the smaller version look almost practical.

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That “practicality” is an illusion, of course; Samsung isn’t talking specific pricing at this stage, but it has conceded that mainstream Ultra HD is probably five years out right now. Since it will take roughly the same sort of time for 4k content to proliferate, that’s plenty of time for people to save up.

CES is definitely shaping up to be the show with Ultra HD as its theme, and Samsung has some competition for the 4k crown. Keep up with all the show news at our CES 2013 Hub.


Thought Samsung’s 85-inch Ultra HD TV was huge? Wait ’til you see the 110-incher… is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Live from the Engadget CES Stage: an interview with Red Digital Cinema’s Ted Schilowitz

Live from the Engadget CES Stage an interview with Red Digital Cinema's Ted Schilowitz

This time last year, the folks from Red Digital Cinema dropped a few exciting goodies off at our trailer, so we’re more than happy to welcome the company’s co-founder (aka “Leader of the Rebellion”) Ted Schilowitz to our stage, to check out the latest in high-end cinematic hardware.

January 8, 2013 4:00 PM EST

Check out our full CES 2013 stage schedule here!

Continue reading Live from the Engadget CES Stage: an interview with Red Digital Cinema’s Ted Schilowitz

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Panasonic Ultra HD Windows 8 Tablet

panasonic4ktablet Panasonic Ultra HD Windows 8 Tablet[CES 2013] Are you still bowled over by the many different technological wonders discovered at CES 2013? Well, today is only the first day of the show (the previous two days’ worth of coverage had to do with the press getting a sneak preview of stuff to come), and you know that you are in for a wild ride. Panasonic has just showed off an unprecedented device in the tablet market – a 20-inch tablet that runs on Windows 8, and best of all is, your eyes will definitely pop out at the mention of “4k resolution.”

So far, eyewitnesses have claimed that the kind of images that this Panasonic tablet (which boasts of an IPS Alpha LCD panel to get the job done) resembles photos even in real life, not to mention fantastic viewing angles, while being accompanied by a stylus and of course, since it is powered by Windows 8, there is no harm in throwing in touchscreen functionality to boot. No further details on this have been released, but we are drooling at the prospect of playing with 4k resolution on a tablet in the future should it be mass produced.

The entire bad boy tips the scales at 2.4 kg, which is roughly the weight of a normal notebook, and measures just 10.8mm thin for easy portability. Image courtesy of Engadget.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Microsoft Sells 60M Windows 8 Licenses, Razer Edge Gaming Tablet Gets Launched,

Sony develops the World’s First and Largest “56-inch 4K OLED TV”

Sony announced today that it has developed the first 4K (3840 x 2160) OLED (organic light-emitting diode) televisions. To demonstrate its latest achievement, Sony will display a 56-inch prototype at The International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. The world’s first and largest 56-inch OLED TV achieves 4K resolution by using the latest oxide semiconductor TFTs and Sony’s own ‘Super Top Emission’ technologies. The OLED panel used in this prototype 4K OLED TV on …