I recently started experimenting with different DVD upscaling methods, and am really pleased with the results. So pleased, in fa […]
Show full quote
I recently started experimenting with different DVD upscaling methods, and am really pleased with the results. So pleased, in fact, that I've managed to convince myself to begin the insane job of upscaling my entire Star Trek DS9 box set. This is something I've been wanting to do since 2020, when excited whispers of how awesome upscaled DS9 can look started appearing on the internets.
I know that upscaling an entire 7 season box set sounds like a ton of work, but I actually don't think it'll be that much of a hassle. First, it helps immensely that I still have the full MPEG2 rips on my server. My grand plan is to perform one upscale a day, then watch the finished episode in all its 10-bit 1424x1080 glory at night. Easy peasy, right? Second, I haven't watched DS9 in absolute ages, so now would be the time to rewatch the entire series anyway. Taking on a huge re-encode project in this way just makes perfect sense.
So after playing around with a compendium of buttons and sticks, I believe I've found the perfect mixture of quality and speed. And check it out! As expected, images that are easy to upscale, such as text and star fields, receive the biggest boost:

But even Quark gets a significant uptick in clarity after he passes through the bazillion and one transistors of a GPU. I mean, just look at this sexy master of acquisition. Don't you just want to reach into your screen and massage his incredibly detailed ears? Those aren't 480i lobes anymore baby! Rawr!

Admittedly, it's a tad ridiculous that it takes this much computing power to make DVD-res video look better on a modern digital display than it did on a progressive-scan CRT television. But better than DVD-on-CRT it finally is, which makes me very happy indeed.
---