In 1969 Japan's National Broadcast Network (NHK) started research on an advanced television system to bring truly high definition television to the public. Their goal for such an endeavor was to "appeal to a higher level of psychological sensation and emotion by transmitting highly intellectual information with detailed characters and graphics." 1 That highly eclectic goal for HDTV remained through its complex evolution to the US system commercialized in 1996. Unfortunately, that goal is being severely and continuously eroded by most of the purveyors of "HDTV." Granted, there are some HDTV offerings with quality of production and distribution levels reaching and perhaps exceeding that lofty NHK aspiration - but not many. There are several reasons for HDTV quality reduction in the US broadcast distribution industry; that industry including OTA, Cable, DBS, et al. Indeed the pioneers of broadcasting - both in radio and television - such as Sarnoff, Armstrong, Farnsworth and others - were frustrated over the de facto applications of the media they labored so hard to create. The hope was that broadcast HDTV would rise to that higher, loftier level and deliver images and sound that would raise the sensual sensitivities of the viewers and ultimately mankind in general. But the economic forces that finance the commercial success of the system interfered, causing, hopefully, a temporary compromise in the quality of HDTV delivery. Interestingly, it took the NTSC delivery system almost 50 years to get it right. Then, along came digitization and the signals were up-converted, down-converted, reformatted, scaled, compressed, transcoded and "bit-starved" to force them down very expensive "pipes." For those who just purchases new HDTV displays, it is possibly frustrating not to be able to see the high quality HDTV images they saw in the showroom, save for some sports and live OTA productions. Generally poor receiver upconverters create fuzzy SD images that are even more myopic when stretched to full screen. So, is there any hope? Yes, there is - a bunch of hope. Allow me to summarize:
Consider the above bullet point a "call-to-action." I don't think we should expect anything less than the original NHK goal for HDTV. Without us, it may take another 50 years to get it right. But it will get at lot better. Ed 1 - From: "Television, The Life Story of a Technology," by Alexander B. Magoun Reader Commentaryterrypaullin • Mar 6, 11:01am You are absolutely right about the potential of the ATSC system we have put in place. Technological improvements have and will continue to give us a better palette to express images that are so powerful they (and the stories they tell) could truly be culture changing. My only hope is that there are enough of us that care. My belief is that many more WOULD care if they could experience HDTV at or anywhere near it's potential. That's why I will continue to advocate paying a little extra for genuine quality products on this site and elsewhere. (yes, that includes BD players). I'm guessing that upwards of 80% of consumers have not yet seen HDTV as good as it can be - or even close. If they had, they would hold the industry to the standards that would better serve us all. You characterized the power of the consumer as being "very strong". I contend that it is even stronger than that! It is, at the end of the day, ALL powerful. Whether it's hardware manufa... ragnars • Mar 6, 4:45pm This deterioration of quality as opposed to technological capability goes back a long time. In the early era of black-and-white television, the US had a 525 line system, Germany 625 and Great Britain a legacy 405 line one. Obviously, the 625 should provide the best picture, followed by slighty worse 525 and really poor 405. But most international observers consistently credited the British, with their 405 lines, as having the best picture. How could this be? Simply because the British TV engineers (from the BBC, which in those days was the only game in town)were meticulous in every respect to wring out every last bit of quality that their system was capable of, no matter how much time and effort it took. In the US, in contrast, the attitude of "good enough" prevailed, and the quality suffered noticably. Incidentally, the French 819 line sytem, which should have provided the best picture by far, suffered from another problem. For it required so much bandwidth, that to achieve that... Richard • Mar 7, 7:05am I have yet to see the promise of HDTV since 2002. I had visions of actually being able to watch broadcast content with the clarity of DVD and decent audio. Thank God for D-Theater, HD DVD and Blu-ray! On the other hand we watch more TV now than we did prior so to that end HDTV has been the success it wanted to be in my home but that's at 5 screen heights, not 3. :?... perfectinght • Mar 7, 7:14am :idea: "Nobody ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public." H. L. Mencken. "The game is flawed." John Nash (A Beautiful Mind) The economics of scale tend to render mediocrity more affordable, visible, accessible and convenient; while excellence persists in being more rare and costly. Such observations should not mean that those with a passion for excellence should be silent in advocating for superior performance. Quite the contrary. It simply means we have to work harder, speak up more frequently, articulately, persuasively and aggressively. "We're on a mission from God!" Jake and Elwood Blues (The Blues Brothers) Best regards and beautiful pictures, G. Alan Brown, President CinemaQuest, Inc. www.cinemaquestinc.com "Advancing the art and science of electronic imaging"... 54mbps • Mar 20, 8:23pm The so-called High Def channels that are currently provided by Cable and Satellite are more like DVD quality than HD...if not worse. I've compared sports programs that's supposed to be "HD" from ESPNHD with a 480p, 4mbps DVD: The 480p signal from the DVD looked sharper than the "HD" signal from ESPNHD. Standard Def from cable and satellite companies are utter garbage...just watch ESPN. They look like they're encoded with 1mbps. It's very discouraging...and this is why I don't watch cable TV anymore. I think it's a crime that TV stations continue to hype about their "HD" quality channels and then not fulfilling their words. Lots of people don't care about HD though, and I think that's a bigger problem... stevekaden • Mar 21, 7:16am In fact we are almost brutally not concerned with quality it is just scary. No one (okay a bit of hyperbole - but what - 85% of us) wants to be bothered learning anything about most anything (except our 1 obsession - sports being a big one). We are running after our bills, kids, work, life, taxes...etc. I'm a recognize-the-problem kind of guy, but there is almost nothing we seem to be able to do about the situation. I work with my kids, but they somewhat act as if I'm obsessive, my wife just smiles vapidly. Anyway, sorry for the rant, but it is so frustrating. I suppose if we all just work with our friends, teach what to look for, then ask those who have crappy video providers to drop an email or note to their providers...well maybe a sample of the audience speaking out will push them along. We can only help it won't take a solid majority of complaints.... akirby • Mar 21, 9:34am The so-called High Def channels that are currently provided by Cable and Satellite are more like DVD quality than HD...if not worse. I've compared sports programs that's supposed to be "HD" from ESPNHD with a 480p, 4mbps DVD: The 480p signal from the DVD looked sharper than the "HD" signal from ESPNHD. Standard Def from cable and satellite companies are utter garbage...just watch ESPN. They look like they're encoded with 1mbps. It's very discouraging...and this is why I don't watch cable TV anymore. I think it's a crime that TV stations continue to hype about their "HD" quality channels and then not fulfilling their words. Lots of people don't care about HD though, and I think that's a bigger problem On what type and size of display? What about OTA? I've compared OTA football games with DirecTV on both Fox (720p) and CBS (1080i) on my 55" Mits CRT RPTV and I honestly could not see a difference. This was 1-2 years ago though.... stevekaden • Mar 21, 9:43am Personally, I am liking what i see in sports from my dish system, and my cousins DirecTV system. BUT, I have not compared with over the air or...Verizon's FIOS. I have a co-worker who got FIOS from Comcast cable and he said with out a doubt, without even comparing purposefully, FIOS was CLEARLY significantly a better picture. (This on a new 1080 panasonic plasma.) So, I think FIOS with it's ~infinite bandwidth fiber, is maybe the gold standard. A way to convince all the providers to up their quality is to beg for FIOS, and then sign up the minute it is in your neighborhood. I'm still waiting, but bug them regularly. Besides, it's a great value as well and has very fast internet.... hharris4earthlink • Mar 22, 2:48am I'm a little uncomfortable commenting on this subject because it is so subjective and depends on so many factors, but here goes. First of all, you have to have a screen larger than 50" to see the full 1080p resolution anyway unless you sit closer to the screen than one would normally comfortably view a TV set. Paying for 1080P with a 50 inch or less screen is probably a waste of money. So unless you have a very large display, you'll never notice a quality problem with any source 720P or greater. I have a 50 inch display and get a ton of high resolution content that looks amazing from my DirecTV receiver and my PS3 Blu-ray player, HD sources that are available to anyone. This includes movies and network and satellite programs that have all gone HD. Also my Samsung display upscales normal DVD to give a very clear picture that looks to my eyes almost, but not quite, 720P. From a practical point of view, this means I get to keep most of my large DVD collection while replacing cert... miller • Mar 22, 6:31am
First of all, you have to have a screen larger than 50" to see the full 1080p resolution anyway unless you sit closer to the screen than one would normally comfortably view a TV set. Paying for 1080P with a 50 inch or less screen is probably a waste of money. So unless you have a very large display, you'll never notice a quality problem with any source 720P or greater. All subjectivity aside, there is one thing you may not have considered: Scaling artifacts. If you watch a lot of 1080 source on a 720p set, everything will be down-converted to 720, which will produce visible artifacts at any screen size. So while most may not get the benefit of 1080p on smaller screen sizes, you won't have the visual artifacts related to downrezzing. - Miller... More from Ed Milbourn
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About Ed MilbournAfter graduating from Purdue University with degrees in Electrical Engineering and Industrial Education in 1961 and 1963 respectively, Ed Milbourn joined the RCA Home Entertainment Division in 1963. During his thirty-eight year career with RCA (later GE and Thomson multimedia), Mr. Milbourn held the positions of Field Service Engineer, Manager of Technical Training and Manager of Sales Training. In 1987, he joined Thomson's Product Management group as Manager of Advanced Television Systems Planning, with responsibilities including Digital Television and High Definition Television Product Management. Mr. Milbourn retired from Thomson multimedia in December 2001, and is now a Consumer Electronics Industry consultant. |
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