Home Cinema 4K UHD Panasonic TV Information By Dreyn77 2024

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 3

  • @Gma7788
    @Gma7788  2 месяца назад +1

    If there's an image fault with your movie in home cinema 🎥 it's YOUR JOB to tune the movie.
    You're the projectionist.
    Your movie on disc didn't arrive perfectly tuned to version 563.
    No, if you want to see version 563, it's YOUR JOB to tune that version in your TV advanced tuning section.
    There's NO COMPLAINING ABOUT 4K or Blu-ray OR DVD cause you were the only person who's responsible for tuning the RAW movie out of the factory.
    You can't just press play and expect to see the famous movie.
    Once you press play, you have to wait for the TV 📺 and Disc player to warm up and get working properly and display the fine detail.
    That takes 7 hours of constant projection.
    You may as well use that 7-8 hours of warm up time to go into the advanced tuning settings and spend the time tuning your copy to something.
    There's over 1000 versions of the famous movie you can choose to watch.
    It takes many hours to tune in just 1 version of the famous movie.
    Once you've tuned RED colour to LOOK LIKE RED, then you should tune the colour orange 🍊 to look like orange 🍊.
    Once you find 1 version of Star Wars, then you can spend another 8 hours to find a second version of Star Wars.
    There's over 100 excellent versions of Star Wars from just 1 disc.
    Nobody's tuning your movie accept YOU.
    Movies arrive RAW at your house 🏠
    You're the one who's spending 8 hours to tune in 1 version out of 1000 versions from your home cinema setup 👌
    The Blu-ray version on disc has another 1000 versions for you to find and watch.

  • @Gma7788
    @Gma7788  2 месяца назад +1

    If anyone's complaining about the movie they've just watched or bought, realise they've never realised they're actually complaining about themselves not tuning their own home cinema TV etc...
    If you thought the movie was dark and the manufacturers are to blame, well, NO, your the person with the job of tuning and operating your home cinema.
    If you fail to do your job, then that's your fault.
    Pulp Fiction disc changed all my TV settings by itself.
    All other movies display in RAW form and it's YOUR job to spend hours tuning the famous movie.
    If you don't want to waste that much time, then you've either got to go back to the public cinema or buy the tuned streaming version.

  • @Gma7788
    @Gma7788  2 месяца назад +1

    The colours in these photographs were taken after 5 hours of constant projection.
    But it was the RAW version.
    I have changed the photographs in editing this video.
    What you're seeing isn't the photographs I took from my screening.
    Since taking the photographs, I have spent 10 hours tuning in 1 version of this famous movie 🎬 🎞
    I can tell you these photos DON'T represent what I saw when I completed tuning in 1 version of this movie.
    I changed the photographs to take out obvious faults in them, such as peak brightness was reduced during editing.
    So these photographs SEEM reasonable 🤔 🙄
    But if you tune in this movie, these photographs contain lots of faults.
    So realise what you're seeing in these photographs isn't what you see when you tune in 1 version of the famous movie 🤔 🙄
    So when you press play ▶️ on your dvd 📀 player it takes a further 7 hours for the pixels in the center of your TV screen to show all the fine details.
    That's the sad reality of home cinema.
    If you get to 8 hours of constant playing and you decide to change the image from warm to cool, then you have to adjust all the other settings cause they will be wrong after you've made that change.
    You're in for another 4 hours of work just readjusting all the settings to suit the cool display.
    It's 8 hours to tune in 1 version of 1 movie from scratch/nothing, and if you change 1 thing, that's another 4 hours of work.
    If you want to watch another version, that's another 8 hours of work adjusting for that version.
    Home cinema IS a lot of work.
    You should record your settings as well.
    If you don't, that's another 8 hours of tuning to get back to the version you saw.
    They don't tell you it's 8 hours till you can watch your movie.
    They want you to have no idea what's going on and you'll be in buying frenzy mode.
    Each movie you buy, on disc, represents 8 hours of work before you get to sit down to watch it.
    That's depressing.