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- LG FLASH TOOL STUCK AT 4% FOR FREE
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- LG FLASH TOOL STUCK AT 4% TV
What you want to hear is Sony Consumer Electronics saying they wouldn't support the next MPEG standard, or Sony Pictures Entertainment announcing they'd standardize their delivery format on VP9. It's basically no-cost for these shops to turn out this gear for whatever marketing event Google cares to throw.
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Panasonic and Sony were demonstrating Google TV STBs a few years ago and I we all know how that turned out.
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If you're a professional the licensing of the codec is completely irrelevant, it's a poor economy if the quality is even remotely compromised. "Content providers," as a term, rarely describes the people working the camera or doing the color (let alone syncing the sound). Of course Google might just be trying to buffalo filmmakers, which would be nothing new, I suppose. I work in film post-production in Hollywood and I'm not sure we've had any consultations on VP9, MPEG always gets SMPTE and the ASC involved in screenings and quality shootouts. The DivX 10.1 Beta decoder was capable of 210.9 fps at 720p, 101.5 fps at 1080p, and 29.6 fps at 4K. On November 14, 2013, DivX developers released information on HEVC decoding performance using an Intel i7 CPU at 3.5 GHz which had 4 cores and 8 threads. This transmission of 4K HEVC video in real-time was an industry-first. Live coverage of the race in 4K HEVC was available to viewers at the International Exhibition Center in Osaka. Elemental provided live video streaming of the 2013 Osaka Marathon on October 27, 2013, in a workflow designed by K-Opticom, a telecommunications operator in Japan. On October 29, 2013, Elemental Technologies announced support for real-time 4K HEVC video processing. On October 16, 2013, the OpenHEVC decoder was added to FFmpeg.
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The HEVC encoder supports the Main 10 profile at Level 6.1 allowing it to encode 10-bit video with a resolution of 7680x4320 at 60 fps. On May 9, 2013, NHK and Mitsubishi Electric announced that they had jointly developed the first HEVC encoder for 8K Ultra HD TV, which is also called Super Hi-Vision (SHV).
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It will benefit those on faster connections as they won’t have to waste their expensive bandwidth on videos. It means that those on slower connections will not have to wait for buffering and be satisfied with low-resolution videos. The third benefit of VP9 is that it can deliver high-resolutions at low bit-rates thus using less bandwidth to watch content. At the same time being Open Standard and Open Source it also ensures that users won’t require proprietary (and insecure) technologies like Flash to view content.
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VP9 is beneficial for everyone as it makes the codec available to vendors for free of cost – thus boosting its adoption compared to the non-free H.264/265. These hardware vendors include major names like ARM, Broadcom, Intel, LG, Marvell, MediaTek, Nvidia, Panasonic, Philips, Qualcomm, RealTek, Samsung, Sigma, Sharp, Sony and Toshiba. Google today announced that most leading hardware vendors will start supporting the royalty-free VP9 codecs. VP9 keeps FSF happy, users happy, content providers happy, carriers/ISPs happy and hardware vendors happy. According to reports LG (the latest Nexus maker), Panasonic and Sony will be demonstrating 4K YouTube using VP9 at the event. Google has also learned the hardware partnership game and has already roped in hardware partners to use and showcase VP9 at CES. Google started offering the codec on royalty free basis to vendors to boost adoption. Google acquired the technology from O2 and open sourced it. That’s not the best news, the best part of this story is that Google will do it using it’s own open sourced VP9 technology. They stream fine over 24mbps ADSL2 but the bitrate is not great (the vids are noisy). In fact 4K vids on Youtube were one of the first materials I tested my panel on. On the topic of Youtube, I thought they'd supported 4K since 2010.
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I'm stuck waiting for the eventual NV GTX 800 series which probably will.
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It's gone if you switch to 1080p, but you won't if you have a 4K panel, will you.įWIW the Sony supports hdmi 2.0 and thus but good luck finding a GPU that outputs it.
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It's not the kind of lag you see but the kind you feel. The thing has one of the lowest input lag scores on the market, but the slow refresh still makes cursor input really laggy. The worst thing is probably the input lag introduced by the low refresh rate. you just instinctively ignore the slow refresh. When you have a window-like view to your games, photos etc. If you're looking for getting impressed then the resolution will vastly overpower the refresh rate.
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I've actually got a Sony X9005A as a desktop display for my PC and no, the 29Hz refresh rate does not make it "unimpressive".
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