Given that most theaters project in 2K still, and that 4K projectors start in, I believe, just north of $100K, it would take a tremendous shift in the industry (hence "if Red has their way with the industry") or a gradual descent over, say 5-15 years, before you could consider 4K as a viewing format to be "affordable" even for a high-end home theater. The biggest problem is that the companies have to envision the ability to mass produce it before they can consider producing it at all, and until that happens. The costs of 4K run across the whole spectrum: you can't run it over HDMI, you can't fit a 2-hour film onto a blu-ray disc at good quality with any of the major codecs, very few films have HD transfers at 4K or above, so there aren't many films that could take advantage of the format (and there won't be for a while yet). 4K LCD displays are going for $12-50K, and require four DVI cables and an appropriate number of DVI outs.Caged Horse wrote:Given that 4K monitors and projectors are already available in Hollywood production and Japan is gearing up to sell them to the public, it beats me as to why I should invest in 1080p hardware in the meantime.Jun-Dai wrote:And if Red has their way with the industry, people will all start talking about 4K by then.
Watching Blu-Ray sales crawl their way up to being a "major format" has probably not encouraged any of the major companies to investigate a 4K consumer format, and the major companies tend to move very slowly as these things go. Remember how long it took Blu-ray to go from a format that people were talking about to now, where there are maybe 30-40 good movies available on the format in the US. Well, there's no 4K consortium yet, and the Blu-ray consortium was founded 7 years ago.
Having said all that, Red is convinced that they can put out a quality 4K player that uses 9 GB DL DVDs for full-length films for about $1,000, and has hinted at putting out 4K projectors and 4K LCDs at some point in the future. They are determined to shake up the industry. I remain skeptical, but I also wouldn't be willing to bet against them given the then-impossible things they've already accomplished on the production-side of things.