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#2181 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() b.t.w., your rocker handle reminds me of David Lee Roth, a nuanced factoid from back in the day about his father, a man of many talents - |
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Thanks given by: | eddievanhalen (07-16-2017) |
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#2182 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#2183 |
Senior Member
Sep 2010
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"I have been told by Sony, Dolby Vision software upgrades for their UBP-X800/1000 4K players will be out soon."
[William Kacensky] https://twitter.com/WKacensky/status/886279015383695360 https://twitter.com/WKacensky/status/886395202805485568 https://twitter.com/WKacensky/status/886395872749117441 |
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#2185 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#2186 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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So looking ahead down the road, not just when one-off events are broadcast ^ in the land of the Tour de France ![]() What are we doing about it in order to assure as pleasurable an experience as possible and who’s at the forefront of such ideas/solutions? Katy, Manish and Andrew ![]() “Modelling brightness perception for high dynamic range television” http://ieeexplore.ieee.org:80/docume...3/?reload=true Abstract: High dynamic range (HDR) television offers greater contrast and more immersive images than conventional television, and as such it is an important part of the overall ultra-high definition television package. Standardisation is almost complete, and the industry is already taking the first steps in HDR programme production. The extended dynamic range and brighter screens associated with HDR make sudden jumps in brightness possible. To ensure consistency between programmes and to avoid uncomfortable brightness shifts at programme junctions, some production guidelines are needed for HDR brightness, just as guidelines have been necessary for audio loudness. In order to develop production guidelines for brightness, brightness perception must be understood. In this paper we report the results of subjective tests that measured the overall perceived brightness of a set of HDR images. We then propose ten classes of potential objective metric that relate the displayed pixel luminance levels to the overall subjective brightness level, and evaluate them using our test results as ground truth. The most effective metrics tested are the mean of the pixel luminances, the mean of the pixel luminances raised to the power of 0.82, and the 96th percentile of pixel luminances, all of which performed similarly well. The mean displayed pixel luminance is preferred, since it is the simplest to implement. The effectiveness of these simple objective metrics suggests that real-time brightness monitoring in production is a realistic goal. ^ bolding by me. |
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#2187 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I notice this morning we cracked the 300,000 viewership mark.
![]() Chapeau ![]() and the silent readers. Goin ridin now. |
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#2189 | |
Power Member
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#2190 |
Power Member
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It is also worth noting that higher contrast will make an image look sharper as our eyes perceive resolution as the difference between two objects. The higher the contrast, the more separation in two objects. This is why extremely high contrast displays (OLED) look so sharp. If you took a low contrast/high resolution display and put it next to a high contrast/low resolution display, most people would probably pick the latter. This is why the ISF ranks dynamic range as the number one item for overall image quality (despite typically identifying ANSI contrast as the best way of measuring contrast, which is wrong.
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Thanks given by: | grodd (07-17-2017) |
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#2192 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Yes ![]() the test images were specifically designed to reduce/avoid the usual perceptual conflict (bias) of the Stevens effect. Quote:
![]() Anyway, I'm told the 500 nit graded clip of The Great Wall (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2034800/) shown on the Samsung direct LED Cinema screen to invited guests had very good real contrast. |
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#2193 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#2194 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I agree and also disagree with some of what you said. Contrast Increasing sharpness is real for sure that's why hdr is so great, the increased depth and dimension can increase perceived resolution. On the oled side tho, I've actually heard and seen the opposite, at least with the LG oleds from previous years. Digitalfernandes had the ks9800 and E6 side by side and the ks9800 was definitely sharper with almost all Content they compared. However, where the oled took a major lead in sharpness was very dark scenes. They become a little smudged on led TVs but stay very sharp on the oled (and plasma TVs too). But anything bright and the oled was not as sharp despite "infinite" contrast. |
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#2195 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I had one of those tell me all 4K UHD discs were mastered at 10,000 nits. I couldn't persuade him differently, even though I cited the display info on my then new OPPO 203 telling me masters were 1000 or 4000 depending on the studio involved. If it pans out, lucky for you all. But I'm thinking this isn't even 50/50, more like 01/99. |
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#2196 | |
Power Member
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Looking forward to seeing what the cinema screen stuff looks like. I hope they have a demo at CEDIA this year. |
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#2197 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | gkolb (07-17-2017) |
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#2198 |
Banned
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#2199 |
Power Member
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This is an interesting comment mainly because there wasn't really a "standard" per se for gamma until more recently with 1886. And even with that I've heard that different authoring houses still use different gammas. So some content is 2.2, some 2.4 and some are 1886. It would be great if discs all had metadata that would tell you exactly what the encode was done at so you could make sure your monitor is setup for this condition.
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Thanks given by: | PeterTHX (07-17-2017) |
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#2200 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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But w/ref to Kris' comment I've also heard that gamma is all over the place when it comes to mastering and that in itself is almost like a proto-HDR 'flying blind' kinda deal in relation to how the display should best handle x content. How ever did we survive? ![]() Last edited by Geoff D; 07-17-2017 at 06:43 PM. |
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