January 19, 2015

4K on Mobile - splash, bang or thud?

The new year has just begun and the mobile industry is bracing for the splash of 4K displays in the smartphone market. Will smartphones with Ultra-High-Definition (UHD - the acronym denoting 4K resolution) become a runaway success? They promise a four times higher resolution than the current high-end of small screen technology. They also require four times the amount of data to transfer and a lot more processing muscle to handle the extra workload in tasks such as compression and image enhancement .
 
Rumours have it that Samsung’s Galaxy Note 5 (to be released mid 2015) will feature a 4K screen resolution of 2160 x 3840 pixels on a 5.9 inch display delivering an astonishing pixel density of 746 ppi (pixels per inch). What does this all mean and does it make sense, or is it just one more superlative being added to the spec list of megapixels, octacores etc. to dazzle the consumer?

10-fold increase in 4K smartphone unit shipments

Not if you believe Qualcomm, the Nr. 1 chip supplier in the mobile handset world with a market share of over 50 % for baseband modems in cell phones according to Forward Concepts . A quick look at 4K support in their Snapdragon 805 system-on-chip reveals an unshakeable commitment and formidable investment in this latest display technology.

Smartphone Display Trends 2012 - 2017

Smart Phone Display TrendSource: IHS DisplaySearch, 2015
IHS DisplaySearch expect a 10-fold increase in annual shipments of 4K displays on smartphones by 2017. A modest 6 million units are forecast to ship this year (2015).

Why the 4K smartphone market differs from its TV counterpart

Most of us have witnessed how TV formats battled in moving from PAL/NTSC to high-definition HDTV and the time it took for content and broadcasting in this format to become common. Seers from the mobile world expect the change to 4K to be a completely different kettle of fish. Uptake of this superior technology will be swift . The premise is that mobile devices such as smartphones don’t need to wait for 4K content to become available on a large scale as they are already equipped with cameras and codecs that generate 4K video which can be shared with like-minded. The breakthrough will be further fueled by the fact that consumers buy new mobiles every other year. That’s a very different replacement cycle to PCs or TVs, driving down the cost of high resolution handsets at a much quicker rate. 

Your best viewing distance

 The proposition of enjoying an immersive cinematic experience, viewing an image in fine detail, or simply reading crisp text are undeniably attractive. Does 4K on a handheld deliver on this promise and improve the user experience compared to lower resolution displays? Image quality is an extremely subjective experience and its perception depends on a multitude of factors, not the least of which being the condition of your eyesight. Objectively speaking however, a higher resolution always makes perfect sense the closer you get to the screen or the bigger the screen gets. At some point your eyesight will notice the edges of rasterized text or displayed objects. But how close is close and how big is big? Smartphones are getting bigger by the day - sometimes that small hand can barely hold newer models. In addition, the phone, or shall we call it phablet (phone + tablet) , is at most an arm’s length away from your eyes, usually viewed less than elbow’s length away or some 40 cm / 16 inches. Experts from the display market rely on a simple but reliable rule of thumb for the “best” viewing distance based on screen resolution and size for 16:9 aspect ratios:
  • for UHD (2160 x 3840) it’s 1.5 x height of the display
  • for Full HD (1080 x 1920) it’s 3 x height of the display
Even the best-sighted of us will no longer be able to distinguish differences to the next lower-resolution display beyond this measure.

So, how does this translate to the latest phablets?

Screen Diagonal
Screen Size
Resolution
In
pixels
Pixels-per-Inch (PPI)
Best Viewing Distance (landscape)
SAMSUNG
Galaxy Note 5 **
15 cm
5.9 "
13.1. x 7.4 cm
5.2 x 2.9 "
3840 x 2160
UHD
746
11 cm
4.3 "
SAMSUNG
Galaxy Note 4
14.5 cm
5.7 "
12.6 x 7.1 cm
5.0 x 2.8 "
2560 x 1450
WQHD
515
16 cm
6.3 "
Apple
iPhone 6 Plus
14 cm
5.5 "
12.2 x 6.9 cm
4.8 x 2.7 "
1920 x 1080
Full HD
401
21 cm
8.3 "
 Apple
iPhone 6
12 cm
4.7 "
10.4 x 5.9 cm
4.1 x 2.3 "
1334 x 750

326
31 cm
12.2 "

       ** estimated release is mid 2015

As the table suggests, a cinema quality movie on a 4K smartphone will deliver a better user experience if viewed from a distance of less than 11 cm / 4.3  inches (landscape mode). That’s really close in front of the eyes. Of course, zooming ever further into a hi-res photo by pinching the touchscreen remains an attractive side benefit of 4K content on 4K displays. The “best viewing distance” matches Qualcomm’s affirmation on the average person being able to immediately appreciate the superior quality of a 344 ppi display if viewed closer than 10 inches (25 cm). However note, 344 ppi is not even Full HD resolution.

Notwithstanding, the mobile future is 4K

In the mid nineties when browsing the Internet and Search were at their genesis, I remember contending with technology peers that the future of the medium would remain text-based, more than enough for the emerging knowledge-based, networked society at the time. My rationale was that pictures, let alone videos, would never break through because of bandwidth and cost considerations. How wrong could I have been! As the saying goes “a picture says more than 1000 words”. And if a picture actually sells more than 1000 words, the dynamics of retail and commerce will drive adoption for certain. So, with this in mind and unencumbered by conventional wisdom, 4K on smartphones are destined to break in and break through, even if their added value may not be apparent to the mobile user at first glance.