Wow, I'm a bit disappointed to say what a fragmented, disjointed piece. I love the intent and content of Audioholics, but the grammatical structure and paragraphing of this editorial really messed with my ability to understand its key points. I believe I figured out the following, eventually, and only after googling a bit:
- No one has proposed a new optical standard
- Blu-ray can accommodate 4k video (and would be a good thing compared to creating yet another standard), provided more layers are added, and provided any new compression methods used can be adapted for Blu-ray
- Adapting Blu-ray to handle 4k may or may not allow existing Blu-ray players to read 4k discs, depending on laser, firmware and hardware requirements, and depending on the ultimate video resolution of the Blu-ray player's output display resolution.
- Competing standards in markets that can only support one standard generally sucks
- HDMI sucks (especially compared to far more robust serial communications methods that could have easily handled DHCP and anything else intended for HDMI)
If those were the author's key points, then I completely agree. Just please write in a more coherent manner to reduce the decoding effort
. And if I completely missed key points, please clarify.
As an aside, if existing Blu-ray players can't be retrofitted to play 4k discs regardless of the method or standard, does it matter of a new standard is developed, especially if nothing is created to compete with it? Put another way, if backward compatibility can't be maintained, then disposing of legacy Blu-ray attributes to best accommmodate 4k (essentially creating a new standard but maintaining the blu-ray brand) seems most practical. Call it "Blu-Ray 2.0" or whatever. I don't think this is a minor or arbitrary perspective: as I understand it, the key crippling factor in HDMI was the decision to maintain backward compatibility with DVI, despite the fact that DVI was designed only for very short runs.
Again, I very much enjoy Audioholics, so any clarification on the potential or options to extend Blu-ray to 4k would be great.
Keep up the great work!