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#21 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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There's still the small matter of actually adding HDR10+ to the UHD Blu-ray specifications though. As easy as it may well be to do it still needs, y'know, actually doing. |
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Thanks given by: | gkolb (01-05-2018) |
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#22 |
Expert Member
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I wonder if Apple will get behind HDR10+ and add it to ATV 4K.
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#23 |
Blu-ray Duke
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Thanks given by: | BrownianMotion (01-05-2018), daycity (01-18-2018), Geoff D (01-05-2018), gkolb (01-05-2018), KingWoftam (06-24-2018), legends of beyond (01-05-2018), Ooze33 (01-09-2018), Vangeli (01-05-2018), Vashetti (01-05-2018), zmarty (01-05-2018) |
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#24 |
Active Member
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Hopefully in a few years we can get to TVs that can sustain 4000 nits so this dynamic metadata band-aid is not needed anymore. Dolby Vision still has a slight technical advantage in that the video is 12-bit, but that might not be that big of an advantage.
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#26 |
Special Member
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I'm going to keep this in perspective. Of all the people I personally know with 4K TV's I'm the only one with a UHD player or that watches UHD content.
Everyone else in my family or friends are probably running their programming off coax cable. I want the best possible picture, but I'm happy now with my PQ. Not sure how much more happy I can be with HDR10+ especially if it means upgrading EQ. |
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#27 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Batman Begins without that ****ing DNR I'd be all over like white on rice. As for HP, considering how many TVs out there have shit the bed when to comes to mapping the extremely bright highlights then a dynamic metadata option wouldn't be the worst idea in the world.
The only problem of course is that it still doesn't benefit the current user base who lack HDR10+ capability. |
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Thanks given by: | Doctorossi (01-05-2018) |
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#29 |
Banned
Jan 2017
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#30 |
Blu-ray Knight
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#31 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I'd like to see Vizio make a 1000-nit display this year because right now their mapping of highlights has never caused issue for me and while their current models are half that, the trade-off is that they don't dip to 100-nits at 100% coverage like OLED, nor do they dim over time with sustained brightness like a Samsung or some Sony models. Consistent brightness performance across the board; I like that philosophy and hope they can do that with double the nits this year.
Maybe double the FALD zones too while they're at it. ![]() |
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#34 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...+#post14554668 |
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#35 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I have a Samsung 4k tv, which means that it supports HDR10+, but not Dolby Vision. I also have a lot of UHD Blu-rays with Dolby Vision compatibility. How much will the difference be when playing either HDR10+ content and Dolby Vision content on this tv?
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#36 |
Special Member
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#38 | |
Active Member
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Ideally you would want HDR10+ to be the base layer and DV to be the optional one, but not sure if that is possible without patching all 4K players. |
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Thanks given by: | legends of beyond (01-05-2018) |
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#39 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Also, the HDR10 layer is itself an offshoot from the DV master on this base + enhancement layer system, so in order for the HDR10+ metadata to be derived you'd have to do your DV grade, then the 709 trim pass to create the dynamic metadata, then use that metadata to generate the HDR10 layer, and then run that HDR10 layer through whatever grading tool or plug-in you'd be using to generate your HDR10+ metadata. Not impossible but certainly time-consuming, having to do a master grade and then two separate trim passes to create the two sets of dynamic metadata - but then didn't someone hint that the two systems parse the metadata in very similar ways (albeit not down to the frame by frame level on HDR10+) so perhaps they could simply convert the DV metadata into HDR10+ metadata after all? Simple answer: I dunno. ![]() |
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#40 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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So, you have a 2017 model, right? |
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