• DocumentCode
    836247
  • Title

    Digital cinema: a slow revolution

  • Author

    Dettmer, Roger

  • Volume
    49
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    2003
  • Firstpage
    46
  • Lastpage
    50
  • Abstract
    Digital cinema offers a high-quality image, unaffected by repeated showings. So why can´t you see it at your local multiplex? The explanation for this apparent impasse is a combination of technical complexity and an industry structure that´s fundamentally antipathetic to investment in digital technology. A lack of common standards is another major part of the answer. Resolution has become a big issue in the digital cinema debate, but in comparing digital cinema and conventional celluloid it´s only part of a complex picture. Once the problem of standards has been overcome, the industry will be able to get down to the really big challenge: sorting out the business case. Digital cinema will produce sizeable savings, but will also require massive levels of investment. Digital cinema has suffered from hype in the past, and the technical and commercial barriers remain formidable, but a cautious optimism may now be justified as the UK and China prepare to invest in this new medium.
  • Keywords
    cinematography; digital video broadcasting; entertainment; image processing; optical projectors; standards; DLP technology; business case; commercial barriers; common standards; digital cinema; digital cinemas; digital projector; digital technology; industry structure; investment; large data file; technical barriers; technical complexity;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    IEE Review
  • Publisher
    iet
  • ISSN
    0953-5683
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1049/ir:20031008
  • Filename
    1250450