Quote from: xpclient on February 27, 2020, 09:25:13Sure, 2160p60 makes sense. Why not 2160p120? Putting aside that in the EU, we traditionally use 25/50/100 (it has to do with grid frequency; 50 Hz here, 60 Hz in the US). The reason I have a "4K" TV is that I use it as a huge wall-mounted monitor to display data. And I have a big "4K" monitor because I work with text a lot and need a lot of vertical space that is at a premium in the crazy widescreen days. I don't really have the need when it comes to video. And if, only for proper movies. I don't really get homemade "4K". It just seems like an exercise in wasting resources.
If we are having 4K resolutions, 4k webcams absolutely make sense. 60 fps too. If USB 3 is not enough for that bandwidth, then Thunderbolt or PCIe can be used. Apple already did it in MacBooks since 2015 for FaceTime:
Quote from: Superguy on February 26, 2020, 17:18:05Yes, there is a minority that actually does video calls in high(er) resolution. Not sure about 2160p, but 1080p for sure and they certainly don't use the integrated stuff.
It's not like the vast majority of people need more than what we've got. Does anyone really need 4k FaceTime?
Quote from: ProDigit on February 26, 2020, 12:57:16Think, for example, about SSDs. A single lane of 6.0 can handle the fastest M.2 NVMe SSDs we currently have. You could quadruple the number of drives connected directly to the CPU. And I don't think they're done with speeding up. They really don't do it because of GPUs. And again, 2 lanes of 6.0 can carry as much as 16 lanes of 3.0. Freeing up valuable lanes. Perhaps not that relevant in the consumer market, servers are a different matter.
Pcie 4.0 isn't out yet... And I doubt we'll need anything beyond it, seeing that a pcie 4.0 1x slot is sufficient for playing maxed out games on high end graphics cards (in Linux), and modern CPUs have 24 available anyway.
Even the most demanding GPU servers max out a 15A power line on the wall.
Quote from: _MT_ on February 26, 2020, 12:12:02
I think you're confusing an effect with a cause. If they wanted to provide better webcams, I'm sure they would've found a way. It's not like USB can't handle more.
Quote from: _MT_ on February 26, 2020, 12:12:02I think you're confusing an effect with a cause. If they wanted to provide better webcams, I'm sure they would've found a way. It's not like USB can't handle more.
Quote from: xpclient on February 26, 2020, 11:54:53I think you're confusing an effect with a cause. If they wanted to provide better webcams, I'm sure they would've found a way. It's not like USB can't handle more.
If they use PCIe to internally connect laptop webcams, webcams can be 4K/12 MP 60 fps cameras capturing uncompressed RGB video. But they still connect them using USB. 🤦🏻♂️