A Media, LLC. November 8, November 1, October 25, October 18, Camera Review. Software Review. Monitor Review. Lens Review. More Gear News.
Camera Accessories. Lens News. Software News. Gear News. Lighting News. Lens Filters. Firmware Update. Color Grading. Olaf von Voss Olaf von Voss is a freelance cameraman who is in business for well over a decade. Take part in the CineD community experience. Forgot your password? Log in. They even made a video about it and appended it as a sort of video quality PSA at the beginning of the Blu-ray. The soap opera effect is actually a feature of many modern televisions. Some people don't notice it, some don't mind it, and a few even like it.
Judging from the ratio of Cruise's tweet, it seems most people hate it. It looks like hyperreal, ultrasmooth motion. It shows up best in pans and camera movement, although many viewers can see it in any motion. The effect is potentially welcome for some kinds of video, such as sports and reality TV.
But movies, high-end scripted TV shows and many other kinds of video look -- according to most viewers, and directors like McQuarrie who actually create the movies and shows -- worse when it's applied by the TV.
This motion "whatever" was ostensibly developed to help decrease apparent motion blur on LCDs. Which is to say, any object onscreen that's in motion will be less detailed slightly blurry compared with that same object when stationary.
Read more: What is refresh rate? The short version: In order for high-refresh-rate TVs to be most effective, they need new, real frames to insert between the original frames. Thanks to speedy processors, TVs can "guess" what's happening between the frames captured by the camera originally. These new frames are a hybrid of the frame before and the frame after.
Style: MLA. English Language Learners Definition of soap opera. More from Merriam-Webster on soap opera Britannica. Get Word of the Day daily email! Test Your Vocabulary. Test your vocabulary with our question quiz! Love words? Need even more definitions? Homophones, Homographs, and Homonyms The same, but different.
0コメント