On February 18, 2009, all full-power television stations will be
broadcasting digital signals, possibly high-definition (HD). Blu-ray has become
the high-definition DVD standard. These two factors genuinely enable us to
motivate House of Worship leaders to adopt high-definition media technologies
for use inside and outside of their worship settings.
Over the past four years in particular, I have described, to numerous worship
leaders, the multi-sensory experience that can be created with the use of HD
technologies (HD video and surround audio). Many of these leaders expressed
interest in updating their standard definition (SD) gear to HD to enhance their
worship experience, and to record their worship services (music and teaching)
for distribution on broadcast/cable outlets, internet outlets and portable
media. However, although I spent a lot of time explaining the life-changing
attributes of HD media, only a few leaders shared my faith in HD. The reality
was that these leaders did not have compelling reasons to give up their SD
technologies for the glory found in HD.
Their lack of conversion was simple to understand. First of all, although
consumers are shedding their SD television sets for HDTVs, few have invested in
any other HD video and audio (5.1, etc.) technologies. Second, the HD process
(acquisition to display to distribution) was incomplete for most organizations.
HD broadcasters were among the few that could gather and broadcast or display
HD content.
In other words, there was not a functional, cost-effective or complete HD
solution to cause worship leaders to convert to HD. I fervently preached that
SD was dying and that new life experiences could be found in the resurrected,
heavenly form known as HD. I had very few converts. Here is the problem in more
detail.
I believe that HD is currently the way, the truth and the life for our
industry, as well as for house of worship leaders. The reality of the slow
adoption of HD video players and other portable HD media did not offer
salvation from the bondage of SD technology. Although HD technologies could be
used in a House of Worship to record and display teachings, music and other
worship activities inside the auditorium, there was no cost-effective way to
distribute HD content, via portable media, to congregants and people in the
community.
Distribution of portable media is vitally important to worship leaders. The
only solution was to record the content in HD, then down-convert the HD content
to a standard definition format with stereo audio. Well, they already had SD
gear. Therefore, this self-defeating argument led worship leaders to ask, “Why
should I invest in HD technologies when the final product would be SD and, at
best, stereo?”
That was then. Now, as previously noted, we have at least two good reasons for
worship leaders to adopt HD: broadcasters are less than a year from
broadcasting only in digital, and a standard appears to be set for high-definition
DVD in the form of Blu-ray. Therefore, I believe that, in the United States,
worship leaders are on the verge of trading their SD baggage for the hope of
new life experiences found in HD technologies.
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David Lee Jr., PhD, CEO of Lee Communication Inc.,
Orlando FL, is a licensed minister and has more than 25 years of experience as
a systems integrator. He is a member of Sound & Communications’ Technical
Council.