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4K TVs Continue To Rise Despite TV Shipments Dropping
#81
(04-27-2016, 04:32 PM)BoFox Wrote:
(04-26-2016, 08:51 PM)SteelCrysis Wrote: Netflix says 100 hours of new 4K HDR content is on the way: http://4k.com/netflix-is-dramatically-ex...6-14173-2/
Let's see Amazon Prime try to catch up to Netflix in terms of content and quality ( so many TV shows and movies actually have the ".1" LFE channel for the subwoofer via Netflix on the PS3/PS4 )....   Even the most recent season of Game of Thrones show on HBO Go is barely HD (looks like 720p to me, finally but still nothing like Netflix's 1080p) still does not come with the LFE channel for a true 5.1 output.  The same goes for Hulu's crap. 
However, by judging from this image (from the link in above quote):
[Image: dolby-vision-cave-720x405-c.jpg]
Well, well, ......  if I can see the difference on my NON-HDR monitor right now (which is actually a crappy TN color panel that does Gsync), shouldn't filmmakers just compensate for this by using HDR when creating the picture? 
I agree with the post above that it's the OLED display that would make more sense, where blacks aren't "grey".

Is it just me, or does the non HDR image look 100X more real?

I'm an ice fisherman that lives at the top of the country, just south of Canada, and I see lots of ice.

None of it is neon blue, and the world outside caves is never all neon blue for me either. Ice looks shiney white like in the non HDR picture, the world looks closer to the non HDR picture. (more drab)

Now, I'm wrong if this is supposed to be some alien world of blue, but the world I live in doesn't look like this.
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RE: 4K TVs Continue To Rise Despite TV Shipments Dropping - by RolloTheGreat - 04-27-2016, 06:24 PM

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