| ▲ | Telaneo a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Uncompressed 24-bit 1080p running at 24 FPS requires 1.192 Gbit/s, or 0.149 GByte/s. So a 25 GB (single-layer) blu-ray has enough space for a whopping 167.8 seconds of uncompressed 1080p video running at 24 FPS. You can double that with a dual-layer blu-ray, and there are more corners you can cut, but I don't think you'll fit your movie in there. Video is really big. Compression was needed to make it even vaguely possible unless your quality was in the toilet. HD-DVDs were smaller, so they were more compressed. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | eska a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
I don’t think that you guys should be debating compressed vs uncompressed, but lossy compression vs lossless compression. Your math seems to derive from a naive storage format. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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