…with an imminent break in the middle due to fatigue? I’m just waiting for messages like this:v_hand: and assume that the displays in the 3rd generation then almost 2 years survive:thumbs_up:

Show original language (German)

    kaetho

    *Thumbs up

    Take good care 🙂

    Screenshot_20190312_075717.jpg

    I suspect this technology will prevail.

    The hinge, yes, that remains to be seen. Especially the display when exposed to sunlight, does it crack right at the fold?

    Okey, curved TV’s “they” also wanted to turn us off. I once had one. At the beginning it was gigantic, I immediately believed every advertising promise. Right in the middle and all that… After using it a few times, however, the new curved was no longer sooooo sensational. You have to sit in the middle of it to get the best picture. Well, I only had it for 1 year, then there was another flat one for me.

    Show original language (German)

    The screen lock rate shows how often mobile phone and tablet users rotate their device. It is falling because fewer and fewer consumers turn the device when a cross-sectional video comes on. Portrait format videos receive more attention - the image is also larger.

    The example you link Bohemian Rhapsody is stacked / stacked content, a very popular design tool to show 2 or 3 images.

    Show original language (German)

    @Baum_Berger wrote:

    The screen lock rate shows how often mobile phone and tablet users rotate their device. It is decreasing because fewer and fewer consumers turn the device when a cross-sectional video comes on. Portrait format videos receive more attention - the image is also larger.

    The example you link Bohemian Rhapsody is stacked / stacked content, a very popular design tool to show 2 or 3 images.


    and then? View the landscape format video in portrait format?

    Young people are getting dumber every year 🤦

    Show original language (German)

    So not a real TV channel after all, still the Instagram account of the corresponding channel.

    can’t really be viewed as TV content. or is there also eco or shawinski in portrait format?

    Show original language (German)

    The kids and many adults don’t even know that you can use the smartphone sideways. And more and more providers no longer allow landscape mode.

    The longer that only selfies/portraits and entire people are shown, the portrait format is much more suitable.

    Show original language (German)

    @hed wrote:

    The longer the time, the more selfies/portraits and entire people are shown, so the portrait format is much more suitable.


    Yes, but looking at portraits/selfies and influencer shaky clips is totally different than watching/enjoying TV/films/cinema…

    Kind of like apples and pears…

    Show original language (German)

    ….keep on rockin' 🤘🏼🤘🏼🤘🏼


    @POGO 1104 wrote:


    @hed wrote:

    The longer the time, the more selfies/portraits and entire people are shown, so the portrait format is much more suitable.


    Yes, but looking at portraits/selfies and influencer shaky clips is totally different than watching/enjoying TV/films/cinema…

    Sort of like apples and pears…


    True, but the “enjoy TV” generation is dying out.

    I see this with my kids. We have a 55 inch TV and they themselves have tablets and laptops with external 27 inch screens. But they watch everything on their smartphones, including the films in a 6 × 4 cm window at the top of the smartphone because it is apparently uncool and inconvenient to rotate the smartphone.

    The same play with the sound. There are high-quality sound systems, beatboxes, expensive BT headphones lying around and ultimately they hear the music from the smartphone speakers or the cheap buttons that come with the smartphones.

    And even when colleagues are there, they don’t use the large screens in the room but instead sit together in front of the 5-inch smartphone and watch their clips there (in portrait format).

    Show original language (German)

    @hed then educate your kids properly. Your kids are definitely not the benchmark for the future of the image format. Your children will also understand it, at the latest when they get older, and their eyes as well as their neck/back will suffer from how they spent their childhood and youth in front of the tablet/smartphone.

    Show original language (German)

    It’s wonderful how excited you can be about something like that…

    In any case, based on the past of the consumer electronics industry, I conclude that it is impossible to predict the fate of innovations in this industry. How many useless farts became booms, how many good concepts went down in history as mere elitist curiosity. Keywords: Quadrophony, TED records, Betamax, the relevant Macintosh Portrait Display, DAT, etc.

    So I’m excitedly (and amused) waiting to see in which image format we’ll watch films and - if at all - watch television in the future.

    Show original language (German)

    Have you tried turning it off and on again?

    Haha, what an amusing thread.

    I would still dare to make a bold prediction that “portrait format” will not become established as a common cinema and film format any time soon 😉

    Show original language (German)

    @cslu I wouldn’t be so sure…

    With the increasing world population and the resulting lack of space and rising property prices, it is also worthwhile for cinemas to switch to portrait format at some point.

    Greetings

    NotNormal

    P.S. If someone manages to spend 20 minutes looking at the trend, I’ll donate a beer.

    Show original language (German)
    • Doc likes that.

    @roku73 wrote:

    @hed then educate your kids properly. Your kids are definitely not the benchmark for the future of the image format. Your children will also understand it, at the latest when they get older, and their eyes as well as their neck/back will suffer from how they spent their childhood and youth in front of the tablet/smartphone.


    @roku73

    I don’t care about educating the kids in how. on which medium they want to view pictures and films. Times are changing. Our Eltern and even the pediatrician warned us that you could seriously damage your eyes if you read books and comix all night long under the blanket with the dim light of the flashlight…

    And no, my children are not the benchmark. But, for example, in the last two days at the Basel carnival and recently at a jazz concert, I observed countless people (including many of them older students) taking photos and filming. 8 out of 10 people use portrait format. The same picture on vacation where hordes of tourists take landscape photos themselves in portrait format. Almost the only people who take horizontal shots are those who have mounted their smartphone on a selfie stick.

    Or take a look at the audience contributions, for example in the Tagesschau or 10 vor 10. For example, amateur pictures and films of the ICE derailment near Basel were recently shown. All in portrait format, although when taking photos of a train, the landscape format is absolutely obvious.

    I’m not saying that cinema and TV films will ever be produced in portrait format. But “thanks” to the smartphone, the importance of portrait format is constantly increasing.

    Show original language (German)