QuoteEverything must be controlled via the included remote
Quote from: AlexR on July 31, 2023, 07:32:40"indispensable physical effect at 100 "+ with the correct landing in the near zone, which the owners of 50-75" TVs never had"It doesn't really matter what others say, this can be very subjective, just bring a chair over and try moving it around in front of the screen to get your own sweet spot.
What does the correct landing in the near zone mean? I just purchased a 100 inch screen. How do I set this up properly for screen hight and sitting distance from the screen for maximum effect?Quote from: NikoB on April 07, 2023, 13:26:51Quote from: S.Yu on February 27, 2023, 15:26:13that can't even emulate HDR500Projectors will never be able to work with static metadata from the first primitive HDR10 standard. But projectors, like any device with a limited dynamic range, by virtue of the technology itself, may well work successfully with HDR10 + or otherwise Dynamic HDR, where there are essentially no requirements for brightness as such, and the metadata itself is dynamically linked and recalculated according to the characteristics of the device. Like semi-manual Dolby Vision, it's just that D-HDR10 does it almost automatically.
Projectors that support HDMI 2.1 don't care about Static HDR. It's not a problem with projectors - it's a problem with crap content made in studios. Crap in every sense, not just technically inappropriate Dynamic HDR in transport stream mode.
In fact, today there is nothing to watch on projectors (as well as in cinemas around the world). My projector is gathering dust without turning on for months - because there is nothing to watch.
Hollywood RIP, and in general the world of cinema.
And what remains for top-end projectors? Demonstrate beautiful videos of nature, YouTube, yes games, but none of them is essentially suitable for games either because of the monstrous input lag and the response of the matrices.
The projectors gave that indispensable physical effect at 100 "+ with the correct landing in the near zone, which the owners of 50-75" TVs never had, no matter how cool the picture characteristics were. This effect can only be experienced in commercial theaters (and again, only with the right seat in the hall - in the right place, which all film distributors and experts are well aware of).
In this zone, special geometric-physical proportions are observed when deep physical effects occur at the brain level. If the sizes in the frame are smaller - there will be no effect, if the sizes of objects in the frame are larger, the effect will not be again.
At home, getting this effect is much easier with a projector than consistently getting a seat in such an area in public cinemas.
But when the entire film industry degenerated into a cheap attraction for extremely stupid teenagers, not adults, and there was simply nothing to watch, investments in projectors became meaningless for several years.
Now only the gaming industry reigns in the world, and in this area, projectors are uncomfortable and an extremely expensive, essentially meaningless solution ...
"indispensable physical effect at 100 "+ with the correct landing in the near zone, which the owners of 50-75" TVs never had"
What does the correct landing in the near zone mean? I just purchased a 100 inch screen. How do I set this up properly for screen hight and sitting distance from the screen for maximum effect?
Quote from: NikoB on April 07, 2023, 13:26:51Quote from: S.Yu on February 27, 2023, 15:26:13that can't even emulate HDR500Projectors will never be able to work with static metadata from the first primitive HDR10 standard. But projectors, like any device with a limited dynamic range, by virtue of the technology itself, may well work successfully with HDR10 + or otherwise Dynamic HDR, where there are essentially no requirements for brightness as such, and the metadata itself is dynamically linked and recalculated according to the characteristics of the device. Like semi-manual Dolby Vision, it's just that D-HDR10 does it almost automatically.
Projectors that support HDMI 2.1 don't care about Static HDR. It's not a problem with projectors - it's a problem with crap content made in studios. Crap in every sense, not just technically inappropriate Dynamic HDR in transport stream mode.
In fact, today there is nothing to watch on projectors (as well as in cinemas around the world). My projector is gathering dust without turning on for months - because there is nothing to watch.
Hollywood RIP, and in general the world of cinema.
And what remains for top-end projectors? Demonstrate beautiful videos of nature, YouTube, yes games, but none of them is essentially suitable for games either because of the monstrous input lag and the response of the matrices.
The projectors gave that indispensable physical effect at 100 "+ with the correct landing in the near zone, which the owners of 50-75" TVs never had, no matter how cool the picture characteristics were. This effect can only be experienced in commercial theaters (and again, only with the right seat in the hall - in the right place, which all film distributors and experts are well aware of).
In this zone, special geometric-physical proportions are observed when deep physical effects occur at the brain level. If the sizes in the frame are smaller - there will be no effect, if the sizes of objects in the frame are larger, the effect will not be again.
At home, getting this effect is much easier with a projector than consistently getting a seat in such an area in public cinemas.
But when the entire film industry degenerated into a cheap attraction for extremely stupid teenagers, not adults, and there was simply nothing to watch, investments in projectors became meaningless for several years.
Now only the gaming industry reigns in the world, and in this area, projectors are uncomfortable and an extremely expensive, essentially meaningless solution ...
Quote from: S.Yu on April 09, 2023, 19:12:39I've never heard of such filters and don't believe it exists. An extra layer of glass wastes light source life and reduces contrast for no apparent advantage. Some projectors do have irises that at least enhance contrast(slightly), reduce vignetting and sharpen the corners, at the cost of lower efficiency, but all this is solution to non-issue because panels will simply overtake projectors very soon.Because you are not a projector expert. Therefore, they did not hear what all experienced owners of cinema models know. You just have to start with real professional reviews. But on this site you will not find such reviews for projectors, this is not their trend... ;)
Quote from: NikoB on April 07, 2023, 22:37:26Projectors have maximum contrast only in 100% darkness and high-quality processing of the room to suppress reflections.Yes that's true, but it's an uncomfortable notion in and of itself. If it's my home I'm watching a movie in then I want to be able to do whatever I want, which is far from ideal in a pitch black environment.
Quote from: NikoB on April 07, 2023, 22:37:26But Dynamic HDR can with HDMI2.1 and the same source/content. In principleIn principle it works, but rod cells have bad DR/SNR anyway and cone cells have low sensitivity, the wide DR can be mapped to within 100nits but the eyes will have issues properly and accurately perceiving the whole range, or else we'd have had HDR in cinemas long ago.
Quote from: NikoB on April 07, 2023, 22:37:26But true cinema projectors, on the contrary, have special cinema filters that reduce the luminous flux by 2-4 times intentionallyI've never heard of such filters and don't believe it exists. An extra layer of glass wastes light source life and reduces contrast for no apparent advantage. Some projectors do have irises that at least enhance contrast(slightly), reduce vignetting and sharpen the corners, at the cost of lower efficiency, but all this is solution to non-issue because panels will simply overtake projectors very soon.
Quote from: Thomas44 on April 06, 2023, 16:09:54lmfao. At 120" you have what, 70,80nits left? And at 150"? Completely out of the question. You know not "a lot of wife" that would allow a 100" panel? Then you know of "a lot of wife" that would allow a 150" fresnel screen? And to do what, project an image with soft corners full of rainbow artifacts? You know those 1 chip DLP solutions might fool your eyes, but they don't fool mine.Quote from: S.Yu on February 26, 2023, 18:06:10Yup, another example of projection that unless you absolutely have no place to put that panel, the 98" Redmi would be a far better buy in almost every aspect.
Another one speaking about something he does not know.
98 inches is small first. Then if you're single thats's maybe of to have a 100 inch panel in a living room but I do not know a lot of wife who would accept to have such a big panel.
And again in terme of projection 100 inches is small.
120 inches is ok and 150 is good. We are not close to see 120 or 150 inches panels and you can imagine the power consumption and also the weight issue if you want to hang the panel on a wall
I have this UST since last September and my 83 inches Sony OLED TV has never been turned on since every evening.
Quote from: S.Yu on February 27, 2023, 15:26:13that can't even emulate HDR500Projectors will never be able to work with static metadata from the first primitive HDR10 standard. But projectors, like any device with a limited dynamic range, by virtue of the technology itself, may well work successfully with HDR10 + or otherwise Dynamic HDR, where there are essentially no requirements for brightness as such, and the metadata itself is dynamically linked and recalculated according to the characteristics of the device. Like semi-manual Dolby Vision, it's just that D-HDR10 does it almost automatically.
Quote from: S.Yu on February 26, 2023, 18:06:10Yup, another example of projection that unless you absolutely have no place to put that panel, the 98" Redmi would be a far better buy in almost every aspect.
Quote from: Mitch64 on March 16, 2023, 15:49:56Considering what panel that money can buy, that arguably stands. Unless you absolutely need 120-140", you can buy a much better viewing experience for less than 50% the money.Quote from: S.Yu on February 27, 2023, 15:26:13Again, don't buy fake 4k dithered from 1080P, don't buy "decentered resolution", don't buy fake HDR that can't even emulate HDR500 because there's only ~100nits to go around, don't buy the rainbow effect which is a worse headache than PWM, don't buy 60Hz when nearly every single panel supports higher, last but not least, don't buy display technology that only works with the sun down.so my Samsung lsp 9 t is crap
Quote from: S.Yu on February 27, 2023, 15:26:13Again, don't buy fake 4k dithered from 1080P, don't buy "decentered resolution", don't buy fake HDR that can't even emulate HDR500 because there's only ~100nits to go around, don't buy the rainbow effect which is a worse headache than PWM, don't buy 60Hz when nearly every single panel supports higher, last but not least, don't buy display technology that only works with the sun down.so my Samsung lsp 9 t is crap
Quote from: davidm on February 26, 2023, 18:16:28Can't wait until the pin is put to the UST bubble and someone releases one that's just a good short throw projector with hdmi in, bluetooth and ¼ audio and ... that's it. Everyone has a bluetooth speaker lying around, or you can carry one in your pocket, along with the power cord y'know. And plug whatever you want in for input and output. All the bells and whistles are just a distraction for gullible "reviewers" who fall for it every time.think your wrong buy the Samsung lsp9 t it's stunning picture with or without my ALR screen