The biggest 16K screen of its kind will shortly go on show in Japan.Sony's display has four times as many horizontal pixels as a 4K television and eight times that of a regular 1080p high definition TV, meaning it can show images in far more detail than normal.This will let viewers stand close to the unit - which is longer than a bus - without its image looking blurred.One expert said it would likely take decades for 16K tech to
filter down to consumer products.
And he is hoping that the transformational work that the former Liverpool and Celtic chief did with Raheem Sterling at Anfield and Scott Sinclair in Glasgow will
filter down to him.
That belief does
filter down into the fans, but the demand still remains for these players to start showing it on the pitch on a regular basis.
That belief does
filter down to the fans, but the demand still remains for these players to start showing it on a regular basis.
They may
filter down to individuals for that matter.
Summary: It will take about a decade for fully autonomous or almost fully autonomous technology to
filter down into family cars, a fast-growing company working on the technology has predicted.
"Hopefully some money will
filter down to improve the team, keep players and bring players in."
Hardly a penny seems to
filter down to lower-league teams, grassroots football or fans.
"One of the interesting things is that despite the fact that we have seen strong economic growth in the 2000s in Alberta in particular, as well as Saskatchewan and Manitoba, we are just not seeing that
filter down to the on-reserve level," said senior economist David Macdonald, who co-authored the report.
Sadly, little of the Premier League's billions
filter down but that's another rant altogether.
The recent revision of a few Saudi banks' outlooks by Fitch to negative reflects the rating agency's view of a tougher operating environment facing the Saudi Arabian banking sector, mainly due to the effect of lower oil prices on government spending and the
filter down effect this has on the rest of the economy.
Some of the richest people in the world shop at Harrods - but not much of that money appears to
filter down to the staff in what it calls its "dazzling array of in-store eateries".
I don't pertain to know how the lower oil price index would
filter down to the peasants' pockets ...