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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#21 |
Power Member
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I find that watching OLEDs hurts my head as the light doesn't slowly come and go like older displays but it appears and disappears so quickly it's uncomfortable to me. I find the same with new traffic lights and LED brake lights (and Baz Luhrmann films). I can imagine subtitles flashing on and off to be a similar experience and this is without even mentioning the high nits.
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Thanks given by: | SonSon III (10-30-2018) |
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#22 |
Active Member
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I think it varies from display technology in terms of severity. My old Samsung JS9000 LED with HDR wasn’t as “in your face” as my LG OLED with HDR.
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#23 | |
Active Member
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#24 |
Active Member
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hmmm, I actually do suffer from ocular migraine, on a "consistent" interval at once a year, but for the past 10+ years.
symptoms: localized throbbing pain in the head; blurry/flashy vision before developing into extreme light sensitivity to the point light coming through my closed eyelids would still hurt and I have to create as close to a pitch-black environment as possible to ease the eye pain; general nausea and fatigue for about a week after an attack. I get that once a year for the past 10 years (at least), and I've been watching my LG OLED a couple of hours everyday 7 feet away from the panel at max OLED light level for the past 2 years has neither made my recurring attack more severe/frequent nor less. I'm only describing my own case. |
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#26 |
Active Member
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I’m honestly starting to believe that this is probably isolated to OLED tech and HDR subtitles. Considering that Apple has been invested in OLED as well as offering gray subs leads me more to this conclusion. The problem is, like I said, definitely worse on my calibrated OLED vs my older “first gen HDR” Samsung LED.
Let’s just say that this is an issue to people prone to migraines, and own OLEDs that view HDR content but needs subs. It’s still a huge pool of consumers. The simplest solution is to have subs be either a shade of even light gray or a warm manilla folder color to compensate for the issue. I completely forgot how much worse my OLED subtitles are vs LED. The constant on/off brightness makes me feel terrible and I either have to suck it up (no thx), disable Subs (not an option for me) or to really dial everything down to the point that it feels like I’m watching and old CRT tube that’s on it’s last legs. I will ask once again, is this just OLED owners that are experiencing *extreme* discomfort with pure white subtitles on any HDR content, disc or otherwise? |
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#27 | ||
Site Manager
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Or you're watching the dark knight, it's dark as a cave in your HT man cave. Suddenly Batman says "I am the night! SWEAR TO ME!". You're blind, the crook is not. ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | Mobe1969 (10-31-2018), SonSon III (10-31-2018) |
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#29 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Pure white subtitles in HDR are nightmare on my Samsung KS7000 (European KS8000). Not only they're extremely bright and uncomfortable to read, but due to nature of that TV (edge lit) every time subtitles appear the backlight brightens huge part of image making it washed out, flat and ugly. It's already not so good TV for HDR, so I can't imagine not having control on subtitles. Hail Panasonic! |
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#30 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Once again, I love the panasonic - I just wished it allowed me to default the luminance, not just have to do it each time. |
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Thanks given by: | infiniteCR (10-31-2018) |
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#31 |
Active Member
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May I ask which UHD Panasonic players offer the subtitle luminescence feature?
Also, Do you think it would be wise to attempt to get an Oppo UDP-203/205 with the hopes of the firmware update? They’ve always been good with actually listening to consumer feedback with regards to firmware. I definitely hope that all companies, studios and player manufacturers alike can soon agree on a long term solution for this HDR Sub issue that does bother many. |
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#33 | |
Active Member
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Let’s hope that Oppo rolls out some firmware soon and other companies fall in line. This is good news for Panasonic, but the limitation should also be a huge concern for movie studios that are releasing these “pure white” discs. Unfortunately it’s not limited to 4K Blu-Ray, when I watched the Olympics on DirecTV in 4K HDR I also noticed the pure white sub issue. ![]() I’m glad that at least AppleTV has the issue sorted out via the use of gray subs on HDR content. Last edited by SonSon III; 10-31-2018 at 05:37 PM. |
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#34 | |
Site Manager
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![]() For decades, when I can I change the default background of the app so something like 40-50% but some apps can only have the 100% defaullt. I wonder what will happen when more computing experience can be done in HDR mode monitors. Anyway this subtitle issue would be mostly resolved if for example the OPPOs or other UHD players or the HDR disc itself had or could display subs (and OSDs!) at a simple 50%. Would be similar to 100% white subs in SDR (100 nits) or even better (50% in HDR is 92 nits) |
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#35 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Yes, at some point they'll probably harken back to the SMPTE studies on what brightness is appropriate for dark/dim rooms and readjust. Regarding the Subs though, do these players adjust subs that are baked into the source too?
I really don't like looking at a monitor, really close up, in a dark room for longer than a few moments, so I feel for you. You'd think the people working in the industry on the monitor all day would get it...and they probably do, but there's likely a push to 'vivid' the living daylights ( ![]() |
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#36 |
Site Manager
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If it's baked is part of the image so it wouldn't be changed by a subtittle dimming feature. About close up monitoring, the sitting distance/monitor size is close enough that the monitors cover the field-of-view area controlling brightness, so the eyes are adapted to the image. It's mainly the sudden jump from for example Photoshop or Preview custom grey backgrounds, to the default 100% white of other apps
![]() At least our site has 90ish % blue (Blu-ray style) or grey (Classic style). And choice of white or black surround for screenshots when you click on them |
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#39 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Does anyone know what the lowest model Panasonic has that has it? I know the 900, 820, 9000 all have it. Not sure on the cheaper models. Problem is, you actually need one to check - the manual for the 820 and 900 don't show it. |
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#40 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Never had this problem and my Sony 930e is in a room with no natural light source and I keep the lights off a lot of the time. Subtitles arent big enough or on screen long enough to cause any discomfort. I think itd require a huge screen and a solid bright white screen to cause anything like a headache.
That being said it would be nice to be able to dim subtitles. My tv has dynamic lighting and the subtitles **** with that. Especially in really dark scenes. |
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Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
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