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#101 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Apparently some members are allowed to post with HTML turned on because they will post tables and other formatting that shows correctly. My posting privileges has everything turned On except HTML. BTW, good to see you have your stone problem cleared up. Mine made me very ill and took some time to get over. |
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#102 |
Member
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The disc that you'd get is the same one that the professionals get, which is to say that some of the content is accessible to a casual user, but much of it will not be of much use without instrumentation, at least from a calibration perspective. Some of the material will show the limitations of your setup. In some cases, there won't be anything you can do other than replace equipment. In other cases, it might help to identify weak links in the chain where data is lost.
At launch, instructions are still scant, but we're working on both online tips for casual users in the shorter term and a more exhaustive downloadable manual for advanced users over the summer. The disc will become more usable to the novice over time as more of this is made available. Jason |
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Thanks given by: | Vilya (06-21-2019) |
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#103 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Just IMHO, if you only use it to check for luminance and chroma response, ringing, shading errors, etc., makes it worth the price.
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#104 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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We would hate for you to buy something that you are unhappy with, so those articles will give you some insight. As Jason mentioned, instructions will come later as we work on them. |
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Thanks given by: | Vilya (06-21-2019) |
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#105 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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1. Shoot and finish in 8K. Check 2. Have content that goes to 10,000 nits. Check 3. Have content that will utilize the full 2020 gamut. Check. While we do want something to look good, we also wanted something that would challenge current systems. Everyone has focused tone mapping around 1000 - 4000 nits. The 4000 nit versions are all hard clipped at 4000, so you can visually see what goes above 4000 because it will be clipped. The 2000, 1000, 600 and 100 are the Dolby trim pass options and so those were all offline rendered using the Dolby SoftCMU engine in Transkoder. The idea was that you can use those as approved versions and compare them against what your display is producing. If you use the static tone mapping with the LG, the 1000 clips in some spots. (horses in snow) If you enable their dynamic tone mapping, the clipping goes away. I would have hoped that the static would not have clipped on the 1000 version since it is the capability of the X300 and X310. The X300 dims fully on that shot. X310 maintains brightness, but its off axis performance is less than the X300. Anything using the dual LCD approach will have off axis issues. It was graded on the Pulsar, which does not really clip at 4000. Probably varies from unit to unit. We intentionally made some items 10,000 knowing they would clip and one day we could see them. Shane, the colorist, actually created a fake sun in one shot. In another, he plugged the hole in this rock formation, though that was just as a joke and we did not use it. I think he wanted to see if I would notice. The one version not on the disc is SL-HDR2 and that is because we don't know how to create it today. Perhaps that will make the add-on. The HLG was flagged as SDR, so your display needs to have a manual option to force HLG, which the Z9D has. When you do, it becomes HDR. The HLG is based on the Dolby 1000 trim pass. The butterfly is based on the Dolby 1000 and Dolby SDR 100 709. We used Transkoder to map the SDR100 into HDR and to create the butterfly. The debate that will ensue is using 100 vs something else. Lots of people argue that no one watches SDR at 100. I understand that point. But was it meant to be viewed at 300 nits? I would argue no. We had included a hidden 1000/200, but ran out of disc space. Last edited by Stacey Spears; 06-21-2019 at 06:31 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | DisplayCalNoob (06-21-2019), Geoff D (06-21-2019), LordoftheRings (06-23-2019), mrtickleuk (07-06-2019) |
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#106 | |
Blu-ray Count
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I am not entirely a novice here, but I am nowhere near to having a doctorate in this field, either. I am happy to learn more also. I just wanted to get a feeling for how wide a market your product was intended to reach; there are a lot more novices than experts afterall. |
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#107 |
Special Member
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probably not, however i do and have for over thirty years (always will)
however, unwilling to argue the point after all, that's the standard |
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Thanks given by: | Deciazulado (06-21-2019) |
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#108 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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![]() One thing the butterfly shows is the perceived sharpness difference between HDR and SDR. The Ferris Wheel shot in Seattle has these LEDs in the middle. They look soft and almost out of focus in SDR. They are the same resolution and went through the same process from 4320p to 2160p. |
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#109 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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The disc covers several markets including consumers (end users), calibrators, reviewers and CE companies. In a perfect world, there would probably be a different disc per market. The problem is the cost to author prevents that, so we have one disc that serves all markets. Otherwise we would have to charge $1000+ for the CE company version since it would sell so few. ![]() My first experience with this was in 1992 when I bought a Video Standard on Laserdisc. It was a head scratcher, but it did include a really nice booklet. Something that does not exist today, but we are going to be working on and will have before the end of summer. |
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Thanks given by: | DanBa (06-24-2019), LordoftheRings (06-23-2019), MartinScorsesefan (06-23-2019), mrtickleuk (07-06-2019), Robert Zohn (06-24-2019), Vilya (06-21-2019), Wendell R. Breland (06-21-2019) |
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#110 |
Active Member
Nov 2017
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@Stacey Spears The anticipation, for your disc is greater than any film release, at least for me it is.
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#111 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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As for SDR, I'm another one of the loonies who watches it in the ~100 nit realm (140 in my case, SMPTE say 120 so I nudge it just a wee bit higher). |
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#112 |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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We are hoping to get the current articles updated in a 3rd edition section as well as the dealer list updated on 7/1.
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#113 |
Special Member
![]() Mar 2010
Portishead ♫
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With fireworks in time for the 4th. ☄
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#114 |
Member
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I've confirmed units were received in Germany and Australia and I'll be able to update links once those pages are active. It's already appearing on some EU Amazon pages. They are still inbound to UK, and while they've cleared US customs, I haven't seen an update on delivery for the pallets. It should arrive today. Fingers crossed.
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Thanks given by: | Mobe1969 (06-25-2019) |
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#115 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I see someone's put a listing up for it on amazon.co.uk, seems to be a German seller (which would tally with them getting it first) but £50 is very steep. Shirley a UK seller won't charge that much for it? He asked, hopefully.
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#116 | |
Guest
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This was welcomed for my sensibilities having graded HDR content since 2011, some at 20,000nits and very forward thinking on Stacey's part as a lot of HDR content today does not push that far into the 10,000nit container with much other than specular highlights. Go outside, measure the luminance around you, you'll discover reality offers tremendous ratios and is quite dynamic and often bright. |
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#117 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#118 |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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At NAB one year, Tyler was running around with my LS-100. He measured a white towel next to the pool, on the roof of our hotel, at 50,000 nits. It was a bright day!
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#119 | |
Power Member
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I'm not trying to disparage HDR, but trying to achieve real life luminance levels shouldn't be the goal. If you want that goal, go outside and experience it unfiltered with no display limitations! ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | ShaneMario (06-26-2019) |
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