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Old 08-16-2016, 07:12 PM   #341
DanBa DanBa is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Penton-Man View Post
Thierry pushes VR waaaaay too much for my tastes.
The new Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphone (OLED, Quad HD, 5.7", 1048 nits, 97% P3) is HDR10 compatible.

The Galaxy Note 7 and its Gear VR headset are a right step towards personal virtual giant screen movie theater, but at least 4K screen phone is required for a comfortable HD viewing.
 
Old 08-17-2016, 12:06 AM   #342
Penton-Man Penton-Man is offline
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The Fourth Phase is the first sports film to be mastered in Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos……


On a side note to locals….the Dolby Cinema installation at the AMC Orange (across the street from UCI Med Ctr. as I previously posted) remains on schedule.
 
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Old 08-17-2016, 01:04 AM   #343
Penton-Man Penton-Man is offline
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Follow-up to this post from 2 years ago (to the day!)….
Quote:
Originally Posted by Penton-Man
As an aside, and something else new, the folks from Philips and Charles P. will soon be coming out with a new paper on yet another aspect/proposal for HDR....they’re in favor of getting rid of Y"CbCr in favor of Y"u'v' 4:2:0 signal…and then if you add the higher contrast of HDR on to that, well, the feeling is, with this proposal in practice there will be a pathway to image nirvana.
the News -

Charles Poynton, Jeroen H. Stessen, and Rutger Nijland to be honored with a SMPTE Journal of Certificate of Merit this coming October at the SMPTE 2016 Honors & Awards Ceremony for said paper….
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org:80/Xplore...sp?reload=true

P.S.
If the ieeexplore link doesn't go thru, then here, the Abstract copied and pasted -

Deploying Wide Color Gamut and High Dynamic Range in HD and UHD

Charles Poynton, Jeroen Stessen, Rutger Nijland

This is an extended version of the paper with the same title that has been presented at IBC 2014.1Twenty years ago, Poynton presented a paper at IBC 1994 entitled “Wide gamut device-independent color image interchange.” The CCIR 709 standard had just been adopted (in 1990), and, by 1994, sRGB deployment in desktop computing was well under way. That paper anticipated commercial interest in exchange for wide-gamut imagery. As it turned out, wide gamut was not imminent: We’ve had 20 years of very stable color encoding for video in the form of BT.709 for HD (augmented recently by BT.1886, which finally standardizes gamma), and the 709-derivative sRGB that remains ubiquitous in the computer domain. Now, however, dramatic changes are under way. Wide color gamut (WCG), enabled mainly by RGB LED backlights for liquid crystal display (LCD) displays, has already seen initial deployment in consumer television. High dynamic range (HDR) cameras are commercially available; and HDR displays, mainly enabled by spatially modulated LED backlights, are on the verge of commercialization. Many industry experts agree that consumers will experience WCG and HDR as more significant than increasing spatial resolution from HD (“2K”) to “4K.” This paper revisits the topic of the 1994 paper, but now with some urgency, to address the question: How should wide color gamut and high dynamic range video imagery be encoded? The main conclusion is that the Y’CBCR technique and its variants are perfectly adequate for moderate dynamic range, but yield less than optimum performance when combined with HDR. New encoding techniques are needed. We conclude that: ▪A new high dynamic range opto-electronic conversion function (HDR OECF) (perceptual quantizer) should replace the conventional gamma function to enable HDR. ▪HDR should be encoded with at least 10 bits per component, to suppress “banding.” 10 bits Yȁ- ;CBCR 4:2:0 is at this moment the accepted standard for encoding HDR, and Philips will support the developments deriving from that choice. ▪Going to 12 bits Y”CBCR 4:2:0 will bring too little perceived improvement on natural content; further improvement must come from other changes. ▪CBCR (chroma) subsampling performs worse in combination with the HDR OECF; we propose encoding and decoding constant luminance, with modified u'v' chromaticity components instead of CBCR. ▪Therefore, for the future, we propose going to 10 bits Y”u”v” 4:2:0.

Published in:
SMPTE Motion Imaging Journal (Volume:124 , Issue: 3 )

Last edited by Penton-Man; 08-17-2016 at 01:12 AM. Reason: added a P.S.
 
Old 08-17-2016, 05:00 PM   #344
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Full list of other Honors and Awards Winners…..
https://www.smpte.org/news-events/ne...rds-recipients

Special note as to the recipient of the Progress Medal which is the most prestigious SMPTE award and recognizes outstanding technical contributions to the progress of engineering phases of the motion picture, television, or motion-imaging industries….going to Douglas Trumbull.

I hope his continuing project proves fruitful as I enjoy having options. Any Silicon Valley investment groups interested in funding Magi Pod installations?
 
Old 08-17-2016, 10:05 PM   #345
Penton-Man Penton-Man is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Deciazulado View Post
Technicolor
is constantly working it (HDR)….

 
Old 08-18-2016, 02:14 PM   #346
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Quote:
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is constantly working it (HDR)….

Aw man, Penton. I'm already really excited to see Kubo and the Two Strings tonight. This is exacerbating my annoyance that I do not live near a Dolby Cinema. Luckily, we are on the list to get one, hopefully soon. But I don't think soon enough to see Kubo in Dolby Vision.
 
Old 08-18-2016, 05:19 PM   #347
Penton-Man Penton-Man is offline
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Aw man, Penton. I'm already really excited to see Kubo and the Two Strings tonight. This is exacerbating my annoyance that I do not live near a Dolby Cinema. Luckily, we are on the list to get one, hopefully soon. But I don't think soon enough to see Kubo in Dolby Vision.

Prior to the time any other websites were accurately discussing it, I remember some of our earliest discussions in 2015 here on Blu-ray.com as to whether HDR would enhance Animation imagery in which Adrian asked a good question before Inside Out opened…https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...r#post10865373

History has proven that ^ prediction correct. In short, simplistic terms, animated movies have the potential to be the sweetest eye candy of the HDR frontier.
 
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Old 08-18-2016, 05:31 PM   #348
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Penton-Man View Post

Prior to the time any other websites were accurately discussing it, I remember some of our earliest discussions in 2015 here on Blu-ray.com as to whether HDR would enhance Animation imagery in which Adrian asked a good question before Inside Out opened…https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...r#post10865373

History has proven that ^ prediction correct. In short, simplistic terms, animated movies have the potential to be the sweetest eye candy of the HDR frontier.
I know Inside Out was the first movie to break out of P3 and into full 2020. I would love to see that. Have you heard of any others going beyond P3 yet? If any, I would assume it would be animation.
 
Old 08-19-2016, 12:59 AM   #349
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^ I expect more animated films to explore the frontier of maximum Dolby Cinema luminance in thee aspects of some of their scenes to aid in the storytelling effect.

Last edited by Penton-Man; 08-19-2016 at 06:13 PM. Reason: added the word 'Cinema' for clarity, i.e. ~ 100 nits
 
Old 08-19-2016, 01:03 AM   #350
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Penton-Man View Post

Deploying Wide Color Gamut and High Dynamic Range in HD and UHD
Charles Poynton, Jeroen Stessen, Rutger Nijland
Although, note…Ultra HD Blu-ray only deals in the non-constant luminance format which is also considered the default by ITU for HDR.
 
Old 08-19-2016, 06:15 PM   #351
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Penton. I'm already really excited to see Kubo and the Two Strings tonight.
'Don't mess with the monkey'

https://vimeo.com/179063801
 
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Old 08-19-2016, 06:22 PM   #352
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Penton-Man View Post
'Don't mess with the monkey'

It was incredibly beautiful in more ways than one! And I only saw it in SDR. I can't wait to be able to see it in HDR.
 
Old 08-20-2016, 06:34 PM   #353
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Spike, I would have to do more study on integrator rods and such….
Basic science (which may be unappreciated by casual observers, but is very important as it serves as thee building block for all thinking that follows), UPDATE –

Regarding rods, not in laser projectors, but in dee posterior part of dee eye -> https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...s#post10510357

And their sensitivity to light (i.e. to a single photon!)….http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2016/16...omms12172.html
 
Old 08-20-2016, 06:42 PM   #354
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Since by my handing out above accolades specifically to Douglas T. and Charles et al., I should also give a tip of the hat to someone else we’ve referred to in the past here on Blu-ray.com, namely Thomas -
Quote:
Originally Posted by Penton-Man
I would hope so too as evidenced by previous scientific testing. For those readers not having a TIES account (https://www.itu.int/en/membership/Pages/default.aspx) and thusly no access to the respective sub working group at ITU, although I disagree with the accuracy of a concept he presented earlier in the session, Thomas does provide a good concise summary of the ITU testing results with regards to 4K content and bit rates as well as thoughts from Fox Filmed Entertainment in L.A, here.…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldN1...tu.be&t=14m22s
for being recognized with the SMPTE Workflow Systems Medal Award which recognizes outstanding contributions related to the development and integration of information technology (IT) file-based systems and infrastructures into production processes..
 
Old 08-21-2016, 01:16 AM   #355
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HDR10 vs. Dolby Vision: The new TV format war

...Does that mean Dolby Vision is superior to HDR10? Not exactly. While Dolby's colorists and mastering engineers do, in fact, have a larger artist's palette to work with (given their higher mastering targets compared to HDR10), it's definitely a movie-to-movie basis.
Full article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2...-war/88914196/
 
Old 08-21-2016, 07:45 PM   #356
Penton-Man Penton-Man is offline
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Paul , that title ^ sounds rather provocative. Without reading the entire article, I hope the author(s) realize that in the grand scheme of things, the HDR parameter and how it is used, deployed, etc. is still in its infancy stage. Many things even at the standardization level could be improved upon, e.g. provide a clear definition of the reference level for diffuse white for HDR
 
Old 08-22-2016, 05:06 PM   #357
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And HFR (100/120 Hz)
In the below quote, are thee SAMVIQ (ITU-R BT. 1788) subjective testing method results tallied from 31 observers (pre-screened for normal vision)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Penton-Man View Post
as opposed to HDR, HFR could be described as being in the embryonic phase of consumer delivery, but it’s value (in terms of quality of experience) for sports, rivals that of HDR especially if you’re dealing with sporting events in which the players and the camera(s) move (camera pans). This is why next gen leaders like the EBU are also doing HDR and HFR demos at an upcoming professional conference, namely IBC 2016, top bullet point demo -> https://tech.ebu.ch/events/2016/ibc-2016
 
Old 08-22-2016, 05:10 PM   #358
Penton-Man Penton-Man is offline
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Quote:
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the embryonic phase of consumer delivery....
But it’s coming, e.g. those providers who are already able to manage 4K at traditional broadcast frame rate on the production side, their interfaces can be ready to do HD (rez) HFR without problem as to the data load.
 
Old 08-22-2016, 05:20 PM   #359
Penton-Man Penton-Man is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulGo View Post
HDR10 vs. Dolby Vision: The new TV format war
Full article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2...-war/88914196/
Let’s wait for the Dolby Vision capable Ultra HD Blu-ray player launch in 2017 to see what the bloggers write then.
 
Old 08-22-2016, 07:36 PM   #360
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I just saw this article from the Washington Post raving about the Dolby Cinema presentation of Kubo and the Two Strings:

Dolby Cinema is the way to see ‘Kubo and the Two Strings’
 
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