I'm impressed by the few 4k videos I have got to see on this 65 inch screen I bought for my gal, Gigi.
it's a sony. the black settings are amazing. color is vivid.
anyways, When I was at the store checking this TV and others out before choosing this one, this 100-120 inch TV with I guess O-Led was playing a movie and I asked the guy "Is that a 4k too. and he said "Oh gawd no, it's 8K.. blah blah tech stuff" and I said, oh it doesn't look much different than the 4K vid quality next to it. and he said, Hold on. they dont have 8k video systems out yet I guess but he played the internal 8K demo video
My brain exploded. I was picking up pieces of my brain. the thing was crazy vivid. very 3D in depth.
in 5-10 years when 12k or 16k come out, I can only imagine what the point of it will even be. it will only matter having that much quality in hi-rez if you have a 900 inch home theater wall at home. which would be like 4 stories high. I got a shitty 860p rez (claims it was 1080p but its not that much) that shows on a 100 inch screen. it takes up the whole wall. a 900 inch theater midsize screen would take a mansion to fit. so whats the point of going larger than 8k?
A: The DART spacecraft is scheduled to lift off atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket Wednesday at 1:20 a.m. Eastern time (or 10:20 p.m. Pacific time) from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.
NASA plans to host a livestream of the launch on its YouTube channel starting at 12:30 a.m. Wednesday, 9:30 p.m. Pacific time Tuesday.
one of those nighttime launches some years ago could be seen as far as the bay area. I want to see it tonight. I mean the trail, Im sure I wont see the actual vertical launch. but I might see the tail as it's hitting low orbit.