Thursday, January 24, 2013
Posted by Mizanur Rahman
2 comments | 3:07 AM
Slap bang in the middle of Toshiba's sizable concession at CES 2013 is an exhibit that underlines just how hard TV companies are working to convince us all that their lasrest invention - Ultra HD -- really is worth having .
Two versions of the 84 inch 84L9300- Toshiba second-generation Ultra HD TVs after last years ZL2 glasses free 3D product - are perched along the front of the stand, one showing up scaled Blu-ray discs, and one native Ultra HD
How the 84L9300 deals with up scaling is critical given the lack of native ultra HD footage, and it actually does a good job thanks to its CEVO 4K Quad picture engine, something that's fuelled by a dual core processor.
The up scaled film trailers from a Blu-ray disc that we were able to watch did look impressive and were notable for having well defined edges. A telltale sign of poor up scaling , it's the 84L9300's CQ Engine that's at work here as well as resolution+, an upsacling tech that probably ranks as our favourite slab of TV processing tech around at the moment .
However , switch sides and the native 4K material-playing from a RedRay 4K cinema player, them of the Red 5K cameras used in Hollywood looks very special indeed. Unveiled to ithotnews just before CES 2013 got underway in near blackout conditions,the 84L9300 is initially remarkable for its brightness.
It may LED backlit LCD , the brightest panel tech of all, and which appears to be dominating the early years of Ultra HD , but all of those extra pixels enable the 4k panel to be exploited for intense detail and depth. This is in stark contrast to plasmas, which has until recently struggled to deliver enough brightness since the swap to Full HD resolutions.
The 84L9300 appears to thrive off its extra pixels all eight million of them and some footage of a car driving away into the horizon along a lonely desert highway really is window link.
The 84L9300 along with is siblings in the L9300 series the almost conservatively sized 58 inch 58L9300 and 65 inch 65L9300 also get cloud TV . Toshiba has gone for a Zeitgeist grabbing name but this latest tweak to smart TV has little to do with remote servers.
Wireless P2P tech MiraCast an Apple Airplay type of idea that creates a direct link between a TV and a Phone or Tablet is here but while cloud TV does offer a cloud based service for the uploading of photo for displaying on the TV it's limited to 50 per customer.
Nor is the calendar in Cloud TV got much to do with the cloud. It's specific to the TV and it can't be synced with schedules on iCal google Calendar or any other you might already use.
A Toshiba spokesman informed us that plans are afoot to quickly expand Cloud TV by adding a second dedicated server to handle massages and video up to a total of 5GB though no timetable has been confirmed. Files can't be monitored by Toshiba so users will be free to upload absolutely any video thy choose.
The EPG however is a big improvement. The web generated MediaGuide supplied by Rovi { as opposed to EPGs sent over The air by broadcasters } was already the star of Toshiba 2012 smart TVs. Here it gets a few more colours and an overall more nuanced look.
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2 comments:
hi mizan
good job
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