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posted by on Monday February 06 2017, @01:08PM   Printer-friendly
from the mine-eyes-have-seen-the-glory dept.

A couple of weeks ago in news of someone coming out with 8K resolution televisions, I left a comment to the effect that I have a 4K TV, but there's no 4K content, so an 8K TV was a bit silly. Someone said they thought Netflix had a couple of 4K offerings.

I recently ran across news that I'll have 4K content in the nebulous future. The FCC [US Federal Communications Commission] is taking its first steps toward over the air 4K broadcasts. but it appears that it may be a while before I see it.

There's more about it here at CNet. But all three articles raise questions that aren't answered, primarily, what about bandwidth? It seems to me that without extremely tight lossy compression, it would take four times the bandwidth of 1080p. Will quality be much better than 1080p after they compress the signal?

How will they get around that? Will I lose some side channels? What do you folks have to say?


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 07 2017, @10:35AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 07 2017, @10:35AM (#463968)

    However there's one point one can make: Sure, we need an organization that manages it, and that is controlled by the people. But is there a reason why the organization that manages the cables must be the same organization that manages the roads? Instead of a single, monolithic government, we could have independent cooperatives for each of those tasks, with the government only managing the areas of conflict between those organizations (e.g. the internet cooperative wants to bury new cables, but the street cooperative doesn't want their street to be opened for laying cables).