it's about what people want even if they dont need it once it exists. since 4k exists and is known a lot of people ask for it and to make money as a video guy, you might need to tell people you have it. this is why people switch to sony and they make money with sony now. Canonrumors is too photocentric so anything related to video here is like talking to a brick wall. if you are a pro you know what will make you money and make life easier, and 4k ilc cameras is one of those.Woody said:transpo1 said:And lack of 4K in the rest of the lineup is a lack of perception by Canon into the marketplace- in other words, they were wrong about 4K, and do not have infallible market research, as many have stated. 4K came up faster than they anticipated.![]()
We just carried out a little experiment couple of days ago in our lab. We used three 65" televisions with different configurations: (i) 1080p input into 4k TV (ii) 4k input into 4k TV (iii) 1080p input into 1080p TV. We used identical scene for comparison.
When we viewed the output at normal viewing distance, more than 1 m away, none of us (there were six of us in the lab) could tell the difference. We could only tell the difference when we stood 30 cm away from each screen and pixel-peep at specific areas of the scene. Sure, configuration (ii) gave the best output, but it was only visible when we pixel-peeped at 30 cm distance from the TV.
I feel Canon was not wrong. 4k is over-hyped. It's great for pixel-peepers and serious video editors. But for the man-in-the-street, it's an overkill.
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