OprekPC.com Forum Index
  Modifikasi - Tweak - Overclock      Search      Memberlist      Album
  · Log in Register · Profile · Log in to check your private messages · Usergroups  
             
 Announcement 
saat ini anda sudah bisa menikmati layanan RSS Feed di forum OprekPC.selamat bergabung dengan kami melalui offline mailing news.

Previous topic «» Next topic
Beyond HDTV
Author Message
vectorkalkulus 
belajar ng-Oprek



Joined: 24 Mar 2006
Posts: 159
Location: Parijs van Java
Posted: Thu May 04, 2006 5:06 pm   Beyond HDTV

The future of television got a test-drive recently in New York City. While consumers around the globe are just now getting acquainted with the vivid picture quality of high-definition television, or HDTV, a far more advanced super-high-resolution system is in the works. NHK, Japan's public broadcaster, is working on what it has dubbed Super Hi-Vision: a TV technology—not expected to be commercialized for a decade or more—that produces live video with a resolution 16 times that of today's HDTV and twice that of 70-millimeter movies. The New York City test was recorded for display at a convention of broadcasters who were meeting in Las Vegas.

Last November, NHK conducted its first live test in the field, when it transmitted an uncompressed 24-gigabit-per-second SHV video signal for several hours, producing a picture with a resolution of 7680 by 4320 pixels. The live video was relayed over 260 kilometers of optical fiber and viewed on a screen measuring 10 meters by 5.5 meters. The transmission also included a technically swank audio scheme, with more than 22 channels, to match the video's high resolution. To shoot the live transmission, the researchers used two custom-built cameras equipped with four 8-megapixel CMOS sensors.

Months before, NHK had shown off an 8-minute SHV video to visitors at the 2005 World Expo held near Nagoya, from March to September last year. After postproduction the movie weighed in at 1.4 terabytes and had to be stored on a hard-disk array.

"The typical reaction of the audience was 'Sugoii!' ('Wow!')," says Masaru Kanazawa, a senior researcher engineer in NHK's Science & Technical Research Laboratories, in western Tokyo. He says some 1.6 million Expo attendees watched the video, and many were astonished with the heightened sense of reality it evoked. He attributes this in part to the video's clarity; the system's wide viewing angle of 100 degrees, as opposed to HDTV's 30 degrees and the 15 degrees for standard television; and the advanced audio system. "They felt they were a part of the same scenes," he says.

Despite making such technological progress, NHK's researchers are quick to caution that commercialization of SHV is years—and maybe decades—away. And there are lots of technical and political hurdles left to leap. For instance, the company is working to have the format accepted as an international standard by the International Telecommunication Union-Radiocommunications, which regulates radio spectrum. If an agreement is reached, Kanazawa says the proposed standard could be published as early as this year, and then member countries would get to vote on it.

Perhaps a much greater hurdle SHV faces is further developing the technology so that it can be used for broadcasting. Because of the huge amount of data involved, today it only works over optical fiber. But NHK is looking to one day transmit it via satellite in the 21-gigahertz band range. To do this, NHK's researchers will likely need to come up with some form of algorithm-based digital compression that will bring the data rate down from 24 Gb/s to a somewhat more manageable 200 to 400 megabits per second.

Of course, none of it will matter unless consumers have affordable displays that can reproduce the camera's high resolution. And broadcasters need the cameras to be less complex as well as smaller. Given such obstacles, NHK is targeting 2025, the company's 100th anniversary, for the actual commercial launch of SHV.

Source: IEEE Spectrum Magazine

 
 
OprekPC Ads
Your Ad Here
MAS 
Juru Kunci


Helped: 71 times
Age: 41
Joined: 16 Jan 2005
Posts: 14575
Location: Jakarta-Purwokerto PP
Posted: Thu May 04, 2006 5:45 pm   

HDTV pan jg butuh infrastruktur di tingkat pemancar jg kan? duh kapan yah broadcaster TV ngupgrade prangkatnya.... :( :(
_________________


Supported my new project!
my BB PIN : 259905b9
 
 
vectorkalkulus 
belajar ng-Oprek



Joined: 24 Mar 2006
Posts: 159
Location: Parijs van Java
Posted: Thu May 04, 2006 10:35 pm   

Di Indonesia mulai percobaan tuh, HDTV dan Internet radio (CMIIW). Pilot projectnya RRI dan TVRI. tapi yaa itu, kalo buat HDTV khan harus semua ganti, mulai dari kamera, pemancar, sampe perangkat di sisi pelanggan, jadi prosesnya pasti lama :(

Di Amerika aja baru segelintir yang pake HDTV. tapi kalo ngeliat Jepang udah siaran percobaan tv dengan kualitas diatas HDTV, ikutan ngiler ... kapan bisa nonton file macem "Rome" dan prajurit di barisan akhir bisa keliatan jelas mukanya (bahkan jerawatnya) hihihi :)

 
 
Display posts from previous:   
Reply to topic
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
Add this topic to your bookmarks
Printable version

Jump to:  



Powered by phpBB modified by Przemo © 2003 phpBB Group
Template modified by Mich@³
Customized by OprekPC @ 2007
Page generated in 1.37 second. SQL queries: 13
OprekPC.com topic RSS feed