Så vidt jeg har hørt, så skulle den dog have organiske paneler?
Jeg har besluttet at gå efter en LCD-projektor, fordi jeg desværre er *for* overfølsom for regnbueeffekten ved DLP. Pt. regner jeg med at købe Z5'erens direkte afløser: PLV-Z60 (Z700's "lillebror"), der også skulle være på gaden snart.
Sidst set: The Black Pit of Dr. M 4/5 | SW: Ep. III 2/5 | Elephant 5/5 | Black Sunday (1960) 4/5
the buses that charged past so overflowing with passengers that from the outside they looked like they were making a rush delivery of spare limbs to some far-off war
#8 Der er en del, der oplever en såkaldt "regnbueeffekt", når de ser film via en DLP-projector, hvilket kan være voldsomt generende og hos visse føre til regulært ildebefindende/svimmelhed.
Jeg har ikke selv "udsat" mig selv for et DLP-projiceret billede, men det er efter sigende kun nogle mennesker, der oplever dette fænomen. Andre kan slet ikke se det.
the buses that charged past so overflowing with passengers that from the outside they looked like they were making a rush delivery of spare limbs to some far-off war
This visual artifact is best described as brief flashes of perceived red, blue, and green "shadows" observed most often when the projected content features bright/white objects on a mostly dark/black background (the scrolling end credits of many movies are a common example). Some people perceive these rainbow artifacts all of the time, while others say they only see them when they let their eyes pan across the image. The effect is likely rooted in the concept of the flicker fusion threshold. In some viewers the effect can lead to eye strain, headaches, or migraines after as little as a few minutes of viewing. New LED based DLPs can produce the alternating images fast enough so that most people will not be affected by the rainbow effect.
The "rainbow effect" is unique to single-chip DLP projectors. As described above, only one color is actually displayed at any given moment. As the eye moves across the projected image, these separate colors become visible, resulting in a perceived "rainbow". The manufacturers of single-chip DLP projection systems have used color wheels rotating at higher speeds, or with more color segments, in order to minimize the appearance of the artifacts. These are referred to as 2x, 3x or 4x wheels. For example, a six segment wheel (RGBRGB) rotating at two revolutions per frame would be a 4x wheel.
Jeg er personligt ramt af denne effekt. Når jeg bevæger hovedet, så ser jeg "regnbuerne". Men med forøget hastighed af "hjulet", skulle man blive mindre modtagelig og ved 3 chips DLP systemer, skulle effekten åbenbart ikke være der.
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#1 filmz-Bruce 16 år siden
http://www.recordere.dk/indhold/templates/design.a...
#2 Bony 16 år siden
Når man ser på specs og kigger på prisen, tror man nærmest det er 1. april. Meget interessant! Godt gået Sanyo. Low budget projector, we like!
#3 filmz-Le Samouraï 16 år siden
Jeg har besluttet at gå efter en LCD-projektor, fordi jeg desværre er *for* overfølsom for regnbueeffekten ved DLP. Pt. regner jeg med at købe Z5'erens direkte afløser: PLV-Z60 (Z700's "lillebror"), der også skulle være på gaden snart.
#4 gi-jones 16 år siden
#5 filmz-vassago 16 år siden
#6 filmz-Le Samouraï 16 år siden
#7 filmz-yoshimura 16 år siden
#8 Bony 16 år siden
#9 filmz-yoshimura 16 år siden
Jeg har ikke selv "udsat" mig selv for et DLP-projiceret billede, men det er efter sigende kun nogle mennesker, der oplever dette fænomen. Andre kan slet ikke se det.
#10 filmz-Bruce 16 år siden
This visual artifact is best described as brief flashes of perceived red, blue, and green "shadows" observed most often when the projected content features bright/white objects on a mostly dark/black background (the scrolling end credits of many movies are a common example). Some people perceive these rainbow artifacts all of the time, while others say they only see them when they let their eyes pan across the image. The effect is likely rooted in the concept of the flicker fusion threshold. In some viewers the effect can lead to eye strain, headaches, or migraines after as little as a few minutes of viewing. New LED based DLPs can produce the alternating images fast enough so that most people will not be affected by the rainbow effect.
The "rainbow effect" is unique to single-chip DLP projectors. As described above, only one color is actually displayed at any given moment. As the eye moves across the projected image, these separate colors become visible, resulting in a perceived "rainbow". The manufacturers of single-chip DLP projection systems have used color wheels rotating at higher speeds, or with more color segments, in order to minimize the appearance of the artifacts. These are referred to as 2x, 3x or 4x wheels. For example, a six segment wheel (RGBRGB) rotating at two revolutions per frame would be a 4x wheel.
Jeg er personligt ramt af denne effekt. Når jeg bevæger hovedet, så ser jeg "regnbuerne". Men med forøget hastighed af "hjulet", skulle man blive mindre modtagelig og ved 3 chips DLP systemer, skulle effekten åbenbart ikke være der.