When I was a kid I identified old TV shows because they were black and white... - eviltoast

These days, kids identify them by the aspect ratio.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    1 year ago

    And video quality. Watching some historical videos from my childhood, like tv shows on youtube… the quality is pure potato. Either the archiving is terrible, or we just accepted much worse quality back then.

    • Hypersapien@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      People always said that Betamax was better quality than VHS. What never gets mentioned is that regular consumer TVs at the time weren’t capable of displaying the difference in quality. To the average person they were the same.

      • jeffw@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You kinda can tell though. CRTs didn’t really use pixels, so it’s not like watching on today’s video equipment though

        • NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          CRT screens definitely used pixels, but they updated on the horizontal line rather than per pixel. This is why earlier flatscreen LCDs were worse than CRTs in a lot of ways as they had much more motion blur as stuff like “sample and hold” meant that each pixel wasn’t updated every frame if the colour info didn’t change. CRTs gave you a fresh image each frame regardless.

          • Psyduck_world@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I have heard that pixels in CRTs are round and LCD/LED are square, that’s the reason why aliasing is not too noticeable on CRTs. Is this true or another internet bs?

            • NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              They’re not round persay, but they aren’t as sharp so have more light bleed into one another giving a natural alaising effect. This is why some old games where the art is designed to account for this bluring look wrong when played on pixel perfect modern TVs.

          • zero_gravitas@aussie.zone
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            1 year ago

            What they’re referring to is that analogue CRTs don’t really have a fixed horizontal resolution. The screen has a finite number of horizontal lines (i.e. rows) which it moves down through on a regular-timed basis, but as the beam scans across horizontally it can basically be continuous (limited by the signal and the radius of the beam). This is why screen resolutions are referred to by their vertical resolutions alone (e.g. 360p = 360 lines, progressive scan [as opposed to interlaced]).

            I’m probably wrong on the specifics, but that gives the gist and enough keywords to find a better explanation.

            [EDIT: A word.]

      • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        VHS was capable of not bad quality, people just had a lot bad equipment.

        Some TV shows (if they were crazy) were shot on film so you could re digitize them now in 4 or 8k and they’d look amazing. But there was also a lot of junk that was out there.

        And as others have mentioned if you do an awful job of digitizing it then you could take something that looked good and throw all of that quality away. But if the tape wasn’t stored in good condition then it could just struggle to be digitized in the first place when done properly.

    • Capt. Wolf@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      There’s a lot of archival video that is just terrible. Digital video compression issues have damaged a lot of old footage that’s gotten shared over the years, especially YouTube’s encoders. They will just straight up murder videos to save bandwidth. There’s also a lot of stuff that just doesn’t look great when it’s being upscaled from magnetic media that’s 240x320 at best.

      However, there’s also a lot of stuff that was bad to begin with and just took advantage of things like scanlines and dithering to make up for poor video quality. Take old games for example. There’s a lot of developers who took advantage of CRT TVs to create shading, smoothing, and the illusion of a higher resolution that a console just wasn’t capable of. There’s a lot of contention in the retro gaming community over whether games looked better with scanlines or if they look better now without them.

      For example.

      Personally, I prefer them without. I like the crisp pixelly edges, but I was also lucky enough to play most of my games on a high quality monitor instead of a TV back then. Then emulators, upscaling, and pixel smoothing became a thing…

    • Dandroid@dandroid.app
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      1 year ago

      I watch a lot of hockey. Just watching hockey games from the 2000s are full on potato. I don’t remember them looking that bad back then.

        • NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          All sports have been, also the rise of faster refresh LCD as those early flat screens blurred a lot.