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#2161 | |
Senior Member
Sep 2010
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There is also no "technical" report on a more recent live broadcast in Dolby Vision. "RTVE has become the first national channel in Spain to complete a live broadcast in Dolby Audio and Dolby Vision. On July 5th, the historic Solemn Changing of the Guard ceremony was broadcast live in Dolby Vision High Dynamic Range (HDR) technology and Dolby AC-4 sound, using the 4K DVB-T2 trial channel that is operated by RTVE and Cellnexx Telecom. This transmission was available on terrestrial channels in Madrid (channel 32), Barcelona (channel 43) and Seville (channel 36), and viewers with a 4K HDR TV could receive the transmission. Technical partner Ateme provided encoders to help generate the video and audio streams including the dynamic metadata provided by Dolby`s equipment to deliver Dolby Vision HDR." http://advanced-television.com/2017/...-dolby-vision/ http://www.panoramaaudiovisual.com/f...hdr-de-espana/ ![]() "Building on industry standard SMPTE ST 2084 (PQ) and the BT.2020 color space, the addition of Dolby Vision’s ST 2094 dynamic metadata produces the industry’s ultimate HDR format. Encoded by [Ateme's] TITAN in HEVC Main 10, the full Dolby Vision signal is compressed for distribution as a single layer non-backwards compatible stream, or a dual layer stream for uncompromised backward compatibility supporting today’s standard rec.709 TVs as well as the latest Dolby Vision and HDR-10 TVs." https://www.ateme.com/presse-release...h_Dolby_Vision As Ateme provided encoders, the Dolby Vision involved should be ST 2094-10 Dolby Vision. By the way, ST 2094-10 Dolby Vision is at the ATSC 3.0 candidate standard level. https://www.atsc.org/standards/candidate-standards/ https://www.atsc.org/wp-content/uplo...nt-2094-10.pdf |
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#2162 | ||
Blu-ray Emperor
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Quote:
![]() As for his wider point about comparing static to a frame/edge-lit LCD and dynamic to OLED, he neglects the intermediate option: FALD LCD and the kind of HDR processing that's ALREADY dynamically 'active' like on the Sony ZD9, which just ignores the static data and interprets the content itself to best map it to the display. |
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Thanks given by: | Staying Salty (07-12-2017), zmarty (07-12-2017) |
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#2163 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Geoff's in fine form.
![]() Where's Richard Paul?....vacation? |
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#2164 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As more Dolby Vision (ST 2094-10 -> https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...4#post12007747 ) live broadcasts take place it should be interesting to learn of the ambient lighting of the differing viewing environments by observers fortunate enough to have an opportunity to experience these events and how they feel such environments affect the image quality as compared to live HLG projects. |
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Thanks given by: | eddievanhalen (07-13-2017), mrtickleuk (07-13-2017) |
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#2165 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Reminds me, just this past week follow-up analysis of an HLG clip (thumbnail first pictured here -> https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...s#post13271102 )
submitted to a standards working group shows nits and gamut coverage as follows: ![]() ![]() Point being, yes, there are specific tools available to precisely identify dynamic range and gamut coverage….and people who volunteer their time to contribute to such working groups, despite such volunteerism being taxing at times, given day jobs and such, approach these investigations/projects with thee utmost professionalism. |
Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (07-13-2017) |
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#2166 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Sony just contributed 5 new HLG test sequences (shot on a F65, 59.94 progressive, RGB RAW (signal format) for future video coding standardization. Thumbnails to give folks an idea as to the variety of the content:
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (07-13-2017) |
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#2167 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#2168 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I’ll be speaking again with my Grass Valley friend probably next week and I’ll see if he has any other internet link to offer for further insight as to their experiment. |
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#2169 |
Banned
Jan 2017
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For what it's worth, to anyone with a 2016 Samsung TV - someone over at AVS Forum with sources at Samsung (who has been right in the past) says that the 2016 TVs received the HDR10+ update in the last firmware. Now we're just waiting on HDR10+ content, which apparently Amazon will be releasing by the end of August.
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (07-14-2017) |
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#2170 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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That's the thing: I see a few people pining badly for the HDR10+ update but it's not like it's going to make any difference on UHD Blu until the format gets amended AND the various authoring packages are updated, and even then it'll likely be an optional HDR format rather than mandatory which will always remain static HDR10. (Yes, I know it's basically just another packet of metadata atop HDR10 but the point is that not all studios are going to adopt that just because, particularly the ones who are using DV as a dynamic system anyway.)
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Thanks given by: | HeatEquation (07-13-2017) |
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#2171 | |
Banned
Jan 2017
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I'm not really pining for it, as I don't expect it to be a big upgrade. But just letting everyone know that we could see the first content by the end of August. |
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#2172 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Heat's back
![]() One moment...... |
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#2173 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Not only successful, but they beat !! the target date….. https://news.samsung.com/global/sams...ma-led-display |
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#2174 | |
Banned
Jan 2017
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#2177 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Yup, don’t have to worry about exit lights being on and such for fire safety.
Gotta run to beat the traffic to a local freebie event. Later. |
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#2179 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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haven't had time to google translate and read it. Off to Disneyland. ![]() |
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#2180 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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The whole thing seems to be run by Spanish technicians and operators so please let me be exceptical about the picture quality got by them. There's just one thing that's telling me they're doing something "not right". They take the 12 Gigabites feeds from each camera and inmediately compress them to around 30 mgabits/secong, the haven't named the codec used but one can assume it was HEVC, but even with HEVC 30 mgabits/second I think is little bandwith for 12 bit UHD video which has to be compressed on real time as opposed as the several passes no-real time compression used on UHD BD, and let's also keep motion in mind. Quality may have the "wow factor" as every newly introduced technology but believe me, Spanish are not good, to say it softly, at the technical side of audio, video and film production. |
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (07-15-2017) |
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