Ultraflix samsung

Author: f | 2025-04-24

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UltraFlix 4K for Samsung UHD TVs Entertainment technology specialist NanoTech Entertainment has signed an agreement with Samsung Electronics America for the UltraFlix New UltraFlix Commercial ! UltraFlix 4K NanoTechEntertainment NTEK BlackFriday Bestbuy Christmas2025 Samsung sony

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Ultraflix Now on Samsung with Narrator Announcing, Ultraflix

John, Phil Collins, Toto, Peter Gabriel and Lady Antebellum. New IMAX titles include The Living Sea, Rescue, Magic Journey to Africa, Last Reef & Yellowstone. Probably missing a few. Get a Samsung or Vizio set and see for yourself! You're wrong. No need to read the remainder of the post. Wow. just. wow. GET THE FACTS! Google Play is not used to download Ultraflix onto a Samsung TV. Never has been. Never will. repeat: Ultraflix is not downloaded via Google Play. You find it on the Samsung app menu. You click on it. It installs. Kind of like 99% of the apps for any TV. You install what you want. But, only apps that are approved by Samsung show up on this page. One more time just in case...Ultraflix is not downloaded via Google Play. You find it on the Samsung app page. Remember, Ultraflix is on the Samsung TV app page. Has been there for months. Saying it's not doesn't make it so..... GET THE FACTS! Kitt... Debunked! As you can see from the picture, the NP1 can be set to 24P, 25P or 30P. Next! p.s. Next! is a euphemism for what I really want to say, which is I'm out of here for the weekend. "Most channels and movies are in/made in hd so the 4k component is pretty useless" That is exactly what Nanotech is trying to change. Might want to check it out sometime. I think you would see the difference. Have a good weekend. You are correct. (Dang... never thought I'd catch myself saying that to you...) What's your point? Every video signal that is delivered to a consumer is compressed. That's every with a capitol E-V-E-R-Y. Nanotech does a good job with the compression. I am watching The Who Quadrophenia concert video right now. The faster your internet connection, the better it looks. 20Mbps seems to look pretty good to me. Ultraflix supports up to 60Mbps. Subjectively, I believe Ultraflix is better than what I get out of Blu-ray. Your mileage may vary. You're changing topics, but ok. I'll play... No, I haven't seen a Best Buy selling NP1s. From what I read, that was the plan, but it never panned out. The market moved too quickly toward smart TV sets. Sometimes you have to bob and weave. But, clearly there is a relationship with Nanotech and Best Buy that grew out of

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UltraFlix 4K for Samsung UHD TVs

Challenge, and by the looks of things they are making impressive progress. Big Picture/Summary: Ultraflix has created a solid infrastructure/foundation to stream 4K content. They are continuing to grow their system to be capable of serving a large number of titles to a very large number of customers on a variety of platforms. This is where the long term value of the companies lies. Right now they do this with a mix of content. This includes some Native 4K, some is scanned from film, and some is upscaled from 2K. The weak link on many 4K displays is the way they scale HD content to 4K. Ultraflix upscaling is visibly superior. Customers have shown that they want the convenience of streaming. The picture quality of Ultraflix beats Apple TV or Netflix easily. For people with 4K TV’s this is a no-brainer. So, here’s what has happened in November. Ultraflix is now working on 2015 Sony 4K televisions. Ultraflix has started a promo where Sony customers can watch Terminator Genysis for free. This is a great way to sign up new customers. Ultraflix is now working on Samsung 4K Tiezen models. Ultraflix has now uploaded close to 300 titles from Paramount (from a total of 900 titles they have rights to), giving them a legitimate selection of “A” list movie titles. Ultraflix has launched a strong Black Friday promo with very aggressive pricing. 99 rentals for $99. 25 rentals for $49.99. 10 rentals for $24.99. Nobody else combines the convenience of streaming with this kind of quality at this type of pricing. In addition to 2015 Sony 4K and Samsung 4K Tiezen, Ultraflix is currently available on Vizio 4K sets, and is available through the Google Play store. Nanotech has also announced that the service is coming to Hisense, ROKU and Amazon Fire TV among others. Not a bad month. As an investor: Nanotech has clearly struggled to fund this, and that reflects in their current share price. Having said that, the potential upside to what they are doing is huge. Just like companies like Blockbuster were eclipsed by Netflix as HD became the standard, there is now an opportunity for the next generation of services to eclipse Netflix. Ultraflix could very well be that service. Let's try this one more time s l o w l y... The scanner's input is the film. The scanner's output is one single TIFF

Ultraflix Now on Samsung with Narrator Announcing

The content highlights. There's plenty more. The speculation is that at some point, Ultraflix may offer a subscription which would give you access to the majority of the content, but not to everything. Or, you will be able to stick to the VOD method. As I explained, it's an auto demo loop. It does a couple of seconds on each feature in English, then it switches to Spanish, then it switches to French. You'll also notice that the label on the upper left corner is printed in 3 languages. Kinda makes sense. It's also just a matter of the exact moment when I hit the shutter. I have pictures with all three languages. It's actually pretty common in North America as you can cover all markets. Think of all the people in Canada that speak either French or English, not to mention all the people in the U.S. that speak either English or Spanish. Not sure if these sets are also sold in Mexico, but they might be. Below is an extra picture in French, just so you can see all 3 languages. And if you're familiar with the Moving Murals 4K demo on Ultraflix you will recognize this as exactly the moment when it switches from the scenic mountain shot to the city at night. p.s. Sorry about my finger being in the picture again... Hey Kitt, You're gonna like this! So, I went into Best Buy yesterday and they had the new Vizio 70" on the end cap. There's a demo loop that runs continuously. No remote, and no button pushing required. No disc player or anything. It just plays. You can tell it's the actual Vizio loop because they call out their key technology/features at the bottom on an overlay. And, in the time I was there, Ultraflix came up twice--three times if you include the extended Moving Murals 4K demo that they show. And, by-the-way, the Moving Murals picture looked amazing. And, note that Interstellar is shown on the Ultraflix menu. Also, the only other app that got highlighted in the demo loop was Netflix. So, basically Vizio is showing Netflix content, Ultraflix content and their own video on this loop. Pictures below. Kitt: GI Joe is available now. Pam... It's there. See picture below. Also note a few cool new concert videos, including Styx, ZZ Top, Alice Cooper Owl City and Santana. I know you. UltraFlix 4K for Samsung UHD TVs Entertainment technology specialist NanoTech Entertainment has signed an agreement with Samsung Electronics America for the UltraFlix

NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK): Samsung: UltraFlix

Those early conversations. It involves promoting 4K flat panel TV's, including Sony and Samsung. That is where Ultraflix fits in, and delivering 4K content has been Nanotech's stated top objective since the start. So, I believe it will all work out, both for Nanotech, and their shareholders, and 4K TV customers who will find a variety of quality content on Ultraflix. Hey Mike... Judder is what you see when 24 frame film content is converted to a TV display that uses a different frame rate. Typically 60 frames per second. Some frames are repeated 3 times, some frames are repeated 2 times. Most people don't notice that, but some people do. Ideally you don't want the signal processed at all, or at the most one time. if the NP1 is set to a 30 frame output, the processing could occur twice-once in the NP1, and again in the TV. The reviewer was clearly not familiar with Android 101 or how it is implemented on the NP1. In the NP1 setting menu, there is an "HDMI TV" setting. This lets you choose "HDMI 4K2K" at 24Hz, 25Hz or 30Hz. The best setting for watching movies on the NP1 would be 24Hz as it is the native frame rate. At that point, depending on the TV, you would either set the TV to display a 24P signal, eliminating any judder. Or, you would set the TV to display a 60P signal, and with decent 3-2 pull down, you would again see no judder. The NP1 displays a great picture. Judder is not an issue if you simply set the output as I describe. The main picture quality variable becomes your internet connection speed. Nanotech has done a very nice job encoding multiple streams for each video. Ultraflix then tests your internet connection speed, and serves you the stream that best matches that speed. While it can deliver a 4K image with as little as 6Mbps, it certainly is better to have a connection speed around 20Mbps. At that speed, there are pretty much zero picture quality issues with the NP1. It's not a contention. It's fact. 100% pure fact. Sorry that facts bother you. Absolutes are a little tricky. To say "never" is far from correct. NTEK has delivered on many promises. Have they delivered on everything? No. Has the market changed/evolved? Yes. Has Nanotech needed to bob and weave with that

Samsung Brings NanoTech UltraFlix 4K Streaming

Latest Posts I rarely respond on the forum, but I'll bite on this one, because you bring up some interesting points, and I appreciate your technical background. The family and I watched Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, a 2014 release with Chris Pine, Kevin Costner and Keira Knightly the other night on Ultraflix. I had it on the 6Mbps setting. Our screen is 120". I have the NP1 connected to my system. At 6Mbps, the picture was clearly superior to Netflix or Apple TV. I would also say that for the most part it looked better than any Blu-ray that I can recall in recent memory. The reality is we are moving to a marketplace where most people, myself included, appreciate the benefit of streaming. Ultraflix lets you do that with the largest number of 4K titles, and maintain a really amazing picture. I would encourage you to do a similar test. There are two realities at play here: 1. Many studios--not only Paramount--have little if any native 4K content. Even the new Terminator Genisys that Ultraflix offers was done in a 2K world. I am guessing the majority of Paramount titles on Ultraflix come from 2K digital masters. 2. Having said that, a ton of folks are buying 4K TV's and most will tell you that 1080P content looks worse on them than it did on a native 1080P set. The upscaling provided by the TV manufacturers is not very good. People are willing to pay a premium for content that looks good on their 4K sets. Compared to the built-in scaling, Ultraflix looks a lot better. 3. I am going to guess that the 2K content from Universal which Nanotech gets exceeds Blu-ray quality. And, based on my own viewing experience, the process they use to create the 4K files for Ultraflix is impressive. The simple fact is that the Ultraflix material looks very good, even at 6Mbps. So, I believe there are some extra pixels in there, and I believe they look quite nice. With the Black Friday deal of $1.00 to $2.50 per title, Ultraflix is hardly charging a premium price. In fact, it's a pretty amazing value. Regarding your other comments... People have been speculating on the company's demise for some time on this board, and it has not come to pass. There are many other talented folks behind the scenes that have taken on the

UltraFlix - New UltraFlix Commercial - Facebook

Or DPX file for each frame of film that is scanned. That's a lot of still image files for a full length movie. Which commonly becomes a TIFF sequence. Look it up with that Google thingy. The scanner has nothing to do with outputting a compressed movie file. Make sense? I thought so. Nanotech uses the Lasergraphics scanner which creates a sequence of TIFF still images—one for each frame in the movie. You can google “TIFF Sequence” and get a lot of good information. This is a very common process. Here are the basics: The scanner takes a picture of each individual frame of film. Those individual frames are saved as TIFF files because the quality is very high. Think of this as the uncompressed master file for each movie. There are 24 frames per second, so it becomes a pretty huge file size. At some point those individual TIFF files (the sequence) are compressed to the H.264 or H.265 video stream and synchronized with the separate audio track. That is the final file which is streamed by Ultraflix. As previously discussed: Lasergraphics scans in 4K with TIFF and DPX file output. That is spelled out on this page: You will clearly see the 4K output samples. If you'd like, you can download the sample which opens as a 4096x3112 file. Not only is that 4K, it actually exceeds it by quite a bit. Consumer 4K/UHD is 3840x2160. There really isn’t anything to argue about here. It’s 4K. All of this is becomes clear when you look at a few of the Ultraflix titles on a 4K display. I did and the quality is absolutely there. No, the Ultraflix movies are 4K. As those who have followed the board know, there is a great recent review of Ultraflix picture quality. Interstellar was tested: Compared to Blu-ray: “there was no question the UltraFlix stream showed more detail." Compared to Other streaming services: "The moment I saw the first few frames of Interstellar in streaming 2160p, I realized it made the 1080p streams from Amazon, iTunes, and Vudu look inferior, even outdated.” The full review can be found here: As to the scanner performance: Lasergraphics scans in 4K with TIFF and DPX file output. That is spelled out on this page: You will clearly see the 4K output samples. If you'd like, you can download the sample which opens as a 4096x3112. UltraFlix 4K for Samsung UHD TVs Entertainment technology specialist NanoTech Entertainment has signed an agreement with Samsung Electronics America for the UltraFlix New UltraFlix Commercial ! UltraFlix 4K NanoTechEntertainment NTEK BlackFriday Bestbuy Christmas2025 Samsung sony

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User3196

John, Phil Collins, Toto, Peter Gabriel and Lady Antebellum. New IMAX titles include The Living Sea, Rescue, Magic Journey to Africa, Last Reef & Yellowstone. Probably missing a few. Get a Samsung or Vizio set and see for yourself! You're wrong. No need to read the remainder of the post. Wow. just. wow. GET THE FACTS! Google Play is not used to download Ultraflix onto a Samsung TV. Never has been. Never will. repeat: Ultraflix is not downloaded via Google Play. You find it on the Samsung app menu. You click on it. It installs. Kind of like 99% of the apps for any TV. You install what you want. But, only apps that are approved by Samsung show up on this page. One more time just in case...Ultraflix is not downloaded via Google Play. You find it on the Samsung app page. Remember, Ultraflix is on the Samsung TV app page. Has been there for months. Saying it's not doesn't make it so..... GET THE FACTS! Kitt... Debunked! As you can see from the picture, the NP1 can be set to 24P, 25P or 30P. Next! p.s. Next! is a euphemism for what I really want to say, which is I'm out of here for the weekend. "Most channels and movies are in/made in hd so the 4k component is pretty useless" That is exactly what Nanotech is trying to change. Might want to check it out sometime. I think you would see the difference. Have a good weekend. You are correct. (Dang... never thought I'd catch myself saying that to you...) What's your point? Every video signal that is delivered to a consumer is compressed. That's every with a capitol E-V-E-R-Y. Nanotech does a good job with the compression. I am watching The Who Quadrophenia concert video right now. The faster your internet connection, the better it looks. 20Mbps seems to look pretty good to me. Ultraflix supports up to 60Mbps. Subjectively, I believe Ultraflix is better than what I get out of Blu-ray. Your mileage may vary. You're changing topics, but ok. I'll play... No, I haven't seen a Best Buy selling NP1s. From what I read, that was the plan, but it never panned out. The market moved too quickly toward smart TV sets. Sometimes you have to bob and weave. But, clearly there is a relationship with Nanotech and Best Buy that grew out of

2025-04-22
User3300

Challenge, and by the looks of things they are making impressive progress. Big Picture/Summary: Ultraflix has created a solid infrastructure/foundation to stream 4K content. They are continuing to grow their system to be capable of serving a large number of titles to a very large number of customers on a variety of platforms. This is where the long term value of the companies lies. Right now they do this with a mix of content. This includes some Native 4K, some is scanned from film, and some is upscaled from 2K. The weak link on many 4K displays is the way they scale HD content to 4K. Ultraflix upscaling is visibly superior. Customers have shown that they want the convenience of streaming. The picture quality of Ultraflix beats Apple TV or Netflix easily. For people with 4K TV’s this is a no-brainer. So, here’s what has happened in November. Ultraflix is now working on 2015 Sony 4K televisions. Ultraflix has started a promo where Sony customers can watch Terminator Genysis for free. This is a great way to sign up new customers. Ultraflix is now working on Samsung 4K Tiezen models. Ultraflix has now uploaded close to 300 titles from Paramount (from a total of 900 titles they have rights to), giving them a legitimate selection of “A” list movie titles. Ultraflix has launched a strong Black Friday promo with very aggressive pricing. 99 rentals for $99. 25 rentals for $49.99. 10 rentals for $24.99. Nobody else combines the convenience of streaming with this kind of quality at this type of pricing. In addition to 2015 Sony 4K and Samsung 4K Tiezen, Ultraflix is currently available on Vizio 4K sets, and is available through the Google Play store. Nanotech has also announced that the service is coming to Hisense, ROKU and Amazon Fire TV among others. Not a bad month. As an investor: Nanotech has clearly struggled to fund this, and that reflects in their current share price. Having said that, the potential upside to what they are doing is huge. Just like companies like Blockbuster were eclipsed by Netflix as HD became the standard, there is now an opportunity for the next generation of services to eclipse Netflix. Ultraflix could very well be that service. Let's try this one more time s l o w l y... The scanner's input is the film. The scanner's output is one single TIFF

2025-04-21
User2331

Those early conversations. It involves promoting 4K flat panel TV's, including Sony and Samsung. That is where Ultraflix fits in, and delivering 4K content has been Nanotech's stated top objective since the start. So, I believe it will all work out, both for Nanotech, and their shareholders, and 4K TV customers who will find a variety of quality content on Ultraflix. Hey Mike... Judder is what you see when 24 frame film content is converted to a TV display that uses a different frame rate. Typically 60 frames per second. Some frames are repeated 3 times, some frames are repeated 2 times. Most people don't notice that, but some people do. Ideally you don't want the signal processed at all, or at the most one time. if the NP1 is set to a 30 frame output, the processing could occur twice-once in the NP1, and again in the TV. The reviewer was clearly not familiar with Android 101 or how it is implemented on the NP1. In the NP1 setting menu, there is an "HDMI TV" setting. This lets you choose "HDMI 4K2K" at 24Hz, 25Hz or 30Hz. The best setting for watching movies on the NP1 would be 24Hz as it is the native frame rate. At that point, depending on the TV, you would either set the TV to display a 24P signal, eliminating any judder. Or, you would set the TV to display a 60P signal, and with decent 3-2 pull down, you would again see no judder. The NP1 displays a great picture. Judder is not an issue if you simply set the output as I describe. The main picture quality variable becomes your internet connection speed. Nanotech has done a very nice job encoding multiple streams for each video. Ultraflix then tests your internet connection speed, and serves you the stream that best matches that speed. While it can deliver a 4K image with as little as 6Mbps, it certainly is better to have a connection speed around 20Mbps. At that speed, there are pretty much zero picture quality issues with the NP1. It's not a contention. It's fact. 100% pure fact. Sorry that facts bother you. Absolutes are a little tricky. To say "never" is far from correct. NTEK has delivered on many promises. Have they delivered on everything? No. Has the market changed/evolved? Yes. Has Nanotech needed to bob and weave with that

2025-04-19

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