I meant standard for new TVs in retail marketplace. It's difficult to find non 4k tvs nowIt's not even the standard now. A minority of households has a 4K TV or monitor.
I meant standard for new TVs in retail marketplace. It's difficult to find non 4k tvs nowIt's not even the standard now. A minority of households has a 4K TV or monitor.
They're saying that at 8K the pixel density is high enough that at the distance you sit from a TV the human eye would not be able to notice any more increases in quality like 8K to 12K, or if they could the difference would be miniscule. Not as big as the difference from 4k to 8k or 1080p to 4k. Essentially the higher you go the less of an improvement you are going to see.
At least. 720p Netflix still looks sharp enough to me sitting about 10 feet away on the couch.
Same here. No complaints with 1080p yet. Maybe if we get a cheap 4k 60fps GPUs and fast refresh g-sync monitors, I'll grab the opportunity.I have no reason to upgrade from 1080p. I'm perfectly content.
Its really not. Even upscaled games at 4K look a lot better than 1080p on Pro/X. Movies went from yeah that looks great at 1080p to holy shit its like being at the movies in 4K.
Maybe not, but do people actually sit 10 ft away from TVs? I have a 65 inch screen and sit probably around 5-6 ft awayAssuming a 60 inch screen and sitting 10 ish feet away can the human eye see a difference between 8k and 16k?