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4starman

01/23/15 5:55 PM

#12154 RE: Phil2010 #12153

It needs to work on the iPad and Android tablets and smart phones. THAT is where the users are viewing their videos. Plus these devises do not have the advantage of graphic cards. And from what I can see, it won't play fullscreen on these devises. Maybe it is a limit set on the demo. I gave a brand new IPad Air 2. It takes too long to buffer and no option to expand or send it to the HD TV via AirPlay.

Does anyone know anything more about whether there is an IOS version?

kmikesara

01/24/15 3:13 AM

#12157 RE: Phil2010 #12153

You do not know what I sold and when I sold and through what broker I sold. And buying and selling are not moral decisions but practical ones. I don't buy or sell because I like someone or don't like them. I have gotten the same answers directly or indirectly from Steve for years and G2 still doesn't provide the kind of picture quality necessary to compete. Do I think he is dishonest? No. Do I think G2 will eventually deliver high quality? I don't know. But until it does, buying Destiny stock is costly in terms of passing up other opportunities. That I keep watch on the stock is the best proof that I haven't given up on Destiny.

DoughDiligence

01/24/15 3:39 AM

#12158 RE: Phil2010 #12153

Phil,

The definition of HD that Steve uses is technically true, but it was defined relative to the old television standard of 640 by 480 (or 320). Anything higher than that fits the HD definition.

However, the common TVs now are 1280 by 1080 - known as 1080p or lesser standards 1080 by 720 known as 720p. They also go higher - but those are the most common television screens.

Therefore, Clipstream's current best is just under the 720p standard - but still HD. The problem with Clipstream quality starts to appear when you are using Hi-Res monitors that are 1440 x 1280 or higher. Clipstream has to scale up pixels from 960 to 1440 or higher.

The 4k televisions are 4000 bits wide compared to Clipstreams 960. The market for Clipstream is for commercial grade videos at first. Once Clipstream has a solid customer base for Ads, Trainings, and other promotional videos - they will get likely have to raise their highest quality level. The problem with 4k videos and other hi-def videos is the file size - therefore most internet videos aren't 4k quality. They get scaled down to 1080, 1240, or 1440, etc. Many Youtube videos I see in Windows 7 are 640 x 320 - so Destiny can beat standard Youtube videos. Youtube does not want to transmit extreme hi-res videos either since it woould cost them more money to deliver free videos.