captou Posted November 21, 2014 Share Posted November 21, 2014 Hi, I was just looking at sample videos from the FZ1000 and noticed a weird aliasing effect when viewing the videos in a small window (not full screen) in HD. Either it's me and I'm going crazy or you can see it too. This is a random sample video I found - watch in HD and look at the cables and especially the trees!: Or here - play in this window and change to HD or 4K: While it might be somewhat nonsensical to play a video in HD in a tiny window, the effect still struck me as pretty weird! I noticed because I changed the videos to HD before going full screen. Especially for the vimeo video, the effect is very visible and I imagine a lot of people don't go fullscreen on every single video they watch. I haven't tried for footage from other cameras and perhaps this is a well-known effect and I just haven't noticed so far?? I do know a little about aliasing/moire and how some cameras are worse than others. But this isn't to do with the camera, right (as the effect goes away when you adjust the size of the window). Is this to do with the compression? Cheers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Ebrahim Saadawi Posted November 21, 2014 Share Posted November 21, 2014 If you want to have a proper image you have to set the quality to 1080p and go full screen on a 1080p monitor, otherwise the 1080 video will have to be shown in a window of the screen that's has less than 1080p pixels. Squeezing a 1080p image to something smaller by Windows and/or youtub/vimeo produces all sorts of issues. Not the camera's fault it's the downscaling algorithm. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew - EOSHD Posted November 21, 2014 Administrators Share Posted November 21, 2014 Crude downscaling from such a high resolution 4K image to a postage stamp sized frame is going to do that. Inescapable. Not the fault of the camera. Get a 4K monitor. They're cheap now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew - EOSHD Posted November 21, 2014 Administrators Share Posted November 21, 2014 You can minimise it by downscaling to 1080p in the edit before uploading to YouTube or Vimeo. Really helps. These websites aren't designed to downscale as gracefully. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
captou Posted November 21, 2014 Author Share Posted November 21, 2014 Thanks everyone! I worry if that means lots of people see footage like that though. I suppose it's their own fault if they do - as long as it doesn't put them off from watching... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nick Hughes Posted November 21, 2014 Share Posted November 21, 2014 Most people don't even notice it, so you shouldn't worry too much- there's not really anything you can do about it besides what was written above. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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