Yeah, I saw his post. I know all about the RED, as I work with it quite often. That's the thing, working in the film industry, I hear a lot of talk about 4K, so my perspective gets kinda warped.
Maybe the next Gen of Kinect will actually have it's own CPU like the original was supposed to have so that it could process movement a lot faster than the current one.
I have about 75 Xbox arcade games, 5 games on demand purchases, 1 Xbox original, countless DLC, a very good amount of gamerpics, themes going all the way back to the launch days, and 7+ years of game save files. Total is just under 200 gigs of content basically. No way am I transferring all that to the new box.
New machine is new machine if I wanna play 360 stuff ill bust out my 360. That's me though.
Look what happened with Wii U. They decided to go with a rediculous triple broadway core design just to keep BC with Wii. That CPU is such a bottleneck for the entire system. Had they chose something more modern the Wii U would be mopping the floor with ps360. Do you really want to see a similar issue with 720 over something like that?
But the big deal is - well, all the TV stations and channels have made huge investments in HD cameras and such, and they're probably going to be REALLY unhappy about tossing it all away and having to get 4K gear. Consumers too - they're seeing 4K TVs at CES this y ear, but they probably will NOT expect them for another few years (better part of a decade), especially given current economic conditions. 4K right now has little content (only movies are 4K), no distribution (neither cable, satellite, fiber, internet, nor disc formats have enough capacity and bandwidth to handle it), nor displays. And only the latter is showing early prototypes that'll be where HD was 10+ years ago.
The local TV stations only own the cameras for their news broadcasts, the networks for sports and late night tv. Everything else comes from rental houses, renting the same camera that can be rented by film makers. That being said, most TV is recorded in 2K since even that is way more than what will be broadcast. Your cable and satellite providers are the ones that don't want to have 4K. Their pipeline is nowhere near large enough to handle it, and it'll cost them an arm and a leg to increase it.
Does that apply to cable channels as well? I would presume they'd own their own cameras purely out of necessity and just shuffle them around as needed between shows. This is especially important because if you look at the ratings, on a good day, they're lousy compared to about 20 years ago or so. There's been a gradual decline.
And I'm sure the theatre owners will be really happy about 4K reaching the home as well, just a final nail for the cinematic auditorium after spending the quarter-mill upgrading a theatre.
Give it at least 5 years, where movies will be shot in 8K regularly, theatres will upgrade to 8K (much cheaper), and homes will have a 4K TV. Maybe. Then again, the broadcast industry didn't really like going high-def because it exposed more flaws in sets, makeup and a certain "eww" factor in seeing a face blown up in full 1080p and pore closeups.
Though, some people at CES are announcing 8K TVs right now, too.
Would be great if those end up being the actual specs. I'd especially be excited about the 8 gigs of RAM!
I hate how Microsoft have shoved the whole media hub concept down our throats.
The dashboard used to be a lovely simple thing, now it's polluted with adverts and multiple sub menu's to find the content you want.
One thing I'd bank some serious cash on right now. Sony will introduce pay-for-online gaming. Mark my words on that one. PSNLive is coming.