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#8141 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#8142 | |
Blu-ray King
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![]() Yeah, most 3D fans are hoping for a revival with Avatar 2 but I think we know deep down, it isn’t going to happen sadly. |
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Thanks given by: | DJR662 (01-22-2019) |
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#8143 | |
Senior Member
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This was done by extreme Sony fans (paid influencers?) to justify the ridiculous price premiums over the competition, specifically in reference to the A1E vs the C7... The reviews all showed there was no dynamic metadata on the Sonys, yet the misinformation kept spreading. It's always really bizarre to see Sony product reception online - it's a totally different animal than pretty much any other brand. A1E, A8F, Z9F, even A9F all medicore to "serviceable" products hyped to the extreme by influencers online as if they're miles ahead of the competition and what they actually are. A1E/A8F are both good OLEDs, but at the end of the day they're merely rebadged LG OLEDs with questionable Dolby Vision updates, with performance almost exactly the same as the LGs and sold at a hefty premium over the LGs. A9F again, is a fine product, but with all the hype around "MASTER SERIES", which seems to be an expert marketing gimmick as once again, its performance is virtually the same as the LG OLED and sold at a massive premium. Z9F is the biggest disappointment of the bunch which is just a mid range LCD with a low zone count and an EPIC PQ fail that banked on the success of its predecessor and falsely leveraged the name of the "Z" brand. Spec wise, we knew it was going to be trash, but the amount of people fighting online that Sony's processing would overcome 100 zones (LOL!) and impressions that borderline lie about its performance and mitigate its massive limitations are are pretty perplexing. Don't really see this much with other brands. Last edited by alexanderg823; 01-22-2019 at 02:05 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (01-23-2019), ray0414 (01-22-2019) |
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#8144 |
Senior Member
Sep 2010
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Yet other operationally Universal HDR TV: Philips OLED 804 & 854
https://twitter.com/SteveMay_UK/stat...30433767424000 ![]() Last edited by DanBa; 01-22-2019 at 02:49 PM. |
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#8145 |
Active Member
Nov 2017
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The misinformation about dynamic metadata was spread around by many publications, in articles, even Vincent Teoh had to admit he was misinformed about dynamic metadata and whether or not it was needed on high nit displays. Sony and Samsung fans were convinced, Dolby Vision served no purpose, other than to be a crutch for OLED and lower nit LCD (600 nit) displays.
Penton-Man just posted, that Sony engineers had been in development of there on version of dynamic metadata since 2014. You figured out why Sony and Samsung refused to add DV, now know that Sony reason is pretty similar to Samsungs. |
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#8146 | |
Senior Member
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Not going to go into crazy conspiracy theory mode, but the reviews of the Z9F certainly were remarkably favorable with respect to its remarkably lackluster performance. On the LG side the issue of uniformity/banding is always just a footnote and flyby in reviews rather than a true grilling for an issue that is absolutely devastating for many OLED owners out there... But that is certainly different than just making up fake news features for a TV that it does not have that competitors DO have OR giving great reviews for a television that has regressed half a decade of progress in picture quality. Although I can't recall Vincent Teoh ever admitted to being misled about much. He's been right on the money with regards to what dynamic tone mapping is/can be useful for and the lack of it on various Sony products despite various sources arguing otherwise. Note - I am purposely referring to dynamic tone mapping rather than dynamic metadata. Last edited by alexanderg823; 01-22-2019 at 04:17 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (01-23-2019) |
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#8147 |
Senior Member
Sep 2010
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Latest Multi-HDR table:
https://twitter.com/DanielBa78/statu...78862136741888 ![]() + Adding Dolby Vision to Philips (TP Vision) TVs https://twitter.com/StephenWithers/s...34575567130625 |
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#8148 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Reminds me a little of when Toshiba and Cannon thought SED TV's would take over the LCD/Plasma market https://www.cnet.com/news/toshiba-ca...aunch-to-2007/ |
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#8149 | |
Active Member
Nov 2017
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#8150 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I recently extolled the virtues of dynamic metadata in the Meg thread, gushing over the DV presentation, and I own every word of it, but whatever the DV is doing on my TV isn't especially "dynamic" after all. |
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Thanks given by: | DJR662 (01-22-2019), mrtickleuk (01-23-2019) |
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#8151 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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As for the "dynamic tone mapping" thing, I recall an AVS podcast video thingy with Scott Whatshisface and a techie from Sony where the guy literally said that Sony TVs analyse the incoming HDR signal and make their own dynamic metadata, which I believed at the time but has been proved to be utter nonsense. Sony's HDR mapping credo has been very, very simple up until now: track the PQ curve as far as the display's actual brightness will allow, then clip the shit out of the rest. This means that APL remains true, which is great for all those pseudo-HDR presentations that get people kvetching about how dark they look beause the mapping is killing the average brightness e.g. Goodfeathers, but it means that you certainly lose a good chunk of highlight information with brighter content and this gets more damaging the less peak brightness you have to play with...hence the otherwise unheralded "true" dynamic HDR10 mapping that's in the AF9. |
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#8152 | |
Senior Member
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#8153 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Then again, Panny have gone all in on OLED for their high-end sets, haven't they? So if there's no really good FALD LCD on offer that might complicate things... |
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#8154 | |
Senior Member
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I'm quite pleased with it on my C8 although the LG method is quite refined. I don't know how well the Sony version works in the AF9. Is it a simple, if peak highlight > 650 nit, and max CLL = 4000 use X4000 nit tone curve? This basic example would be that any time the peak pixel in a frame is above 650 it switches to a new tone curve for 4000 nit content. If the pixel is at 651 nit or 4000 nit it doesnt matter it will use the same curve. Or is there more precision, with a tighter sloped tone mapping curve that changes based on how bright the highlight that peak is? So in this instance, a different tone curve would be applied to a frame with 651 nit than a frame with 4000 nit highlight. The 4,000 nit highlight frame would obviously be tone mapped much more aggressively probably resulting in the stereotypically "dim" HDR image. OR does it get REALLY dynamic and change the slope of the mapping curve with respect for the brightness of the peak AND the average picture level of the frame? This would mean the tone mapping for that 4,000 nit highlight frame would also consider the overall brightness level of the frame to determine whether it should lower the overall brightness of the image to squeeze everything in, or boost the low end/mid end up a bit to retain the overall impact of the image. This should be the end game for dynamic or adaptive tone mapping algorithms. |
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#8155 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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If my ZD9 went 'pop' right this second then yeah, another FALD LCD offering isn't looking majorly likely. You couldn't pay me to have a Samsung TV cross this threshold! So it would have to be OLED, despite my misgivings about how my particular viewing habits will jive with the IR, and that Panasonic GZ2000 looks like an absolute monster. It'll probably have a price tag to match, but it'll be worth it. |
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#8156 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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It's not perfect as it's still not a genuine 'scene by scene' adaptation and it kinda throttles the bit depth of the content, also the Optimisation would be even better served by Kris Deering's suggestion of a manual input for what nits the display can handle, but in lieu of any 'dynamic' options (either from a third party or the display's own mapping) it's a nifty bit of kit. |
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Thanks given by: | Robert Zohn (01-22-2019) |
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#8157 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (01-22-2019), Robert Zohn (01-22-2019) |
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#8158 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Yeah. Something that weaned me off of megablasting surround sound was the fabulous audio from the 'dumbo ears' on the Sony X9005A and B TVs that I had, creating a genuinely fake surround effect with some effective bass too. This is when I was still using an AVR quite a lot, especially for all the disc reviews I was writing, but I knew I was on the slippery slope away from an AVR when I finished watching a movie and thought I'd had the AVR on...but it was the TV's sound all the while
![]() Switching to the ZD9, and reading the reviews that mentioned the shite sound, I thought I was going to be losing a lot but to my surprise the audio on the ZD9 retains that same sense of immersive faux surround, albeit without the same quality as the dumbo ears. I've thought about switching to a soundbar to give me a bit more enhancement without knackering my ears further, but that GZ2000 looks like it would do the job nicely. |
Thanks given by: | MechaGodzilla (01-22-2019), nick4Knight (01-23-2019) |
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#8159 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#8160 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I've got some floorstanders for stereo as it is, never really thought about switching to 2.0 only but if I've got the AVR and the big floorstanders there then I might as well keep the sub and the smaller centre and rears hooked up too. Nah. I just wanna get rid of it all.
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Thanks given by: | MechaGodzilla (01-23-2019) |
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