8K TV

Kiki

Well-Known Member
Jul 26, 2014
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It's going to be here sooner than we expect. Dell is already selling a 32-inch 8K monitor at $5000. Manufacturers have been showing 8K prototypes in the last couple years at CES. Now comes this news. I don't know what to think of it. 4K is just starting to enter prime time and I just bought an 4K TV only a few months ago.


Foxconn will spend $10 billion to build 8K LCD TV plant in Wisconsin

Foxconn has announced that it will spend $10 billion dollars to build a new LCD TV factory in Wisconsin, USA. The company says that it will be a state-of-the-art plant that will be capable of producing 8K – four times 4K – LCD TV panels, according to a report by Marketwatch.

To establish “robust 8K ecosystem”

The news was announced by Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker at an event together with US President Donald Trump and Foxconn CEO Terry Gou. Foxconn will spend $10 billion dollars over the course of the next three years to set up the 20 million square-foot plant.

- “We are thrilled to build a state-of-the art display fabrication plant in America’s heartland, which will be the first of a series of facilities we are building in several U.S. states as part of a robust 8K + 5G ecosystem in the United States,” Terry Gou said in a statement.

The factory will be capable of producing LCD TV panels with 8K resolution (7680x4320 pixels). 8K has four times as many pixels as 4K and sixteen times as many as Full HD. The industry sees 8K as the next logical step after 4K to increase demand for large-size TVs.

Foxconn is planning to use 8K panels in Sharp-branded LCD TVs. In March 2016, the company bought a majority stake in Sharp and is currently trying to cancel the licensing deal made with China’s Hisense to sell Sharp-branded TVs in the US.

The factory will initially employ 3,000 people, a number that could eventually grow to 13,000, it was said.

Terry Gou proclaimed that no other plants in the US currently have the capabilities “to produce a complete 8K system”, adding that “we are going to change that and it starts today with this investment in Wisconsin”.

The company announced in April 2017 that it is building a 10.5-generation LCD plant for production of 8K LCD TV panels in Guangzhou, China.

Foxconn is perhaps best known for assembling Apple iPhones in China but following the acquisition of Sharp the company has started to branch out into LCD panel manufacturing. Foxconn is also producing TVs for Vizio.

http://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.php?subaction=showfull&id=1501136819
 
Can't imagine this is really needed unless you have a huge display. For 65" and under I wouldn't think this is required.
 
I can understand 8K monitors for workstations and such, but it's way too soon, as well as redundant for an 8K consumer TV, imo.

Honestly, they should be working on higher/variable refresh for TVs, and getting that ironed out first. I find the current path the electronics industry is going, pretty annoying.
 
s***, I thought we'd skip 8k and go straight to 9
 
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s***, I thought we'd skip 8k and go straight to 9

Yeah, really, 1K : 4K : 9K: 16K.

(Although, of course, with a sample size of two, you can make a lot of sequences. Something like 1:4:27:256, for example. XBox 2 Capricorn Taco Bell Edition is crap because it needs to checkerboard for 256K.)
 
And it begins...


Sharp to release world's first 8K TV in 2018

sharp_8k_tv.jpg


4K? Pfff. Sharp is promising its 70-inch 8K TV will go on sale next year. The company also showed off frameless, 'free form' and 'roll type' displays.

Big TVs are a good way to attract some attention at a trade show, and IFA is no different. Sharp is never one to shy away from a supersize-screen and this year's effort came with an extra headline-grabbing specification: 8K resolution.

Sharp is insisting its 70-inch LC-70X500 8K TV will be the first consumer-ready 8K TV to go on sale when it does so in March 2018 in Japan and China. Those of us in Europe and Taiwan will have to settle for an 8K monitor, the LV-70X500E.

The 'AQUOS 8K' LCD screens have a resolution of 7680 x 4320, which means 16 times the number of pixels compared to a full HD TV.

Sharp has already released 70- and 85-inch 8K monitors in Japan, both of which are compatible with the company's 8K satellite broadcast receiver. In fact, the company showed them at IFA 2016

sharp_frameless.jpg


Not content with upping the resolution ante, Sharp is also showing frameless, 'free form' and 'roll type' screens.

Naturally, they're world firsts - the first 70-inch frameless LCD TV, the first 39.4-inch (specific) free form display and the first 60in full HD roll type screen.

It may all seem a little unnecessary for settling down in front of Masterchef but when it comes to imagining the future shape of screens in our homes, it gives us an idea of what is possible and what could be next.

sharp_freeform.jpg


sharp_rollup.jpg


https://www.whathifi.com/news/sharp...l&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
 
And maybe learn to make better quality TVs. 2017 I better not see clouding, corner bleeding, etc. f*** off.
 
Yeah being that 4K hardly has any content yet why not focus on making existing tech better? 8K seems like a total waste right now, hell 1080p was rushed out before it needed to be.
 
Yeah, not seeing it. It's diminishing returns for sure. Is anything at all even shot at that resolution? It's hard even getting true 4k content. Good for super large screens, I guess.

Anyway, at this point, it just seems like a waste. Will be until they can sell em for 600 bucks like 4k tvs. Man, I hope gaming doesn't chase that spec.
 
Yeah, not seeing it. It's diminishing returns for sure. Is anything at all even shot at that resolution? It's hard even getting true 4k content. Good for super large screens, I guess.

Anyway, at this point, it just seems like a waste. Will be until they can sell em for 600 bucks like 4k tvs. Man, I hope gaming doesn't chase that spec.

There are so many reasons why 8K will be bad, streaming bandwidth will be a problem, not sure if they can get something at that resolution on a disc, and of course as you mentioned gaming. It just seems like something to try to one up the competition in an area that really doesn't matter right now.