: Joel Hruska documented a massive undertaking using high-end hardware, including an AMD Threadripper 3990X, to process episodes through Topaz Video Enhance AI.
: Focused on a 960p variable bit rate (VBR) release, arguing that 4K produced diminishing returns and increased "hallucinated" AI artifacts. Technical Challenges of Season 1
: Released an AI upscale of Season 1 in 4K by May 2020. By September, they pivoted to a "1080p+" release—upscaling to 4K first and then compressing to 1080p to maintain high visual fidelity while reducing massive file sizes (Season 1 was approximately 99 GB in 4K). star trek deep space 9 s01 ai upscale 4k 2020
Season 1 is notoriously difficult to upscale due to its source material baseline:
: AI software like Topaz Video Enhance AI (often used with the "Artemis" model) must "guess" details not present in the original. This sometimes results in a "waxy" appearance for actors' skin or shimmering on fine surfaces like Starfleet uniforms. : Joel Hruska documented a massive undertaking using
Project Defiant: DS9 1080p Upscale of Season 2 Now Available
In 2020, the Star Trek fandom witnessed a surge in independent efforts to modernize Deep Space Nine (DS9), a series famously trapped in standard definition due to the prohibitive costs of a physical film remaster. Projects like and the Deep Space Nine Upscale Project (DS9UP) utilized emerging AI tools to bridge the gap between 1990s broadcast quality and modern 4K displays. The 2020 AI Upscale Boom By September, they pivoted to a "1080p+" release—upscaling
While Paramount has not officially remastered DS9, several fan-led initiatives released significant 4K and 1080p+ upscales during 2020: