How big is yours?

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HDR standard requires a 10,000 nit display. People don’t have this since these tv’s don’t exist yet for purchase.

At most people right now are getting semi HDR at their houses. I’m waiting for 10,000 nit displays to come out before I buy an HDR set.
1000 nits, that too only locally
But yeah, most of sub-1k stuff on the market barely manages 500 let alone 1k
 
1000 nits, that too only locally
But yeah, most of sub-1k stuff on the market barely manages 500 let alone 1k
The sub 1k HDR stuff still looks really good. Imagine what full 10,000 cd/m² range will look.

I usually have my tv at 100 nits for SDR in night time viewing. Anything brighter hurts my eyes. Daytime with closed curtains at 150 nits. Higher it starts to burn my retinas. I can only imagine how bright 10,000 nits is.
 
Last edited by SG854,
The sub 1k HDR stuff still looks really good. Imagine what full 10,000 cd/m² range will look.

I usually have my tv at 100 nits for SDR in night time viewing. Anything brighter hurts my eyes. Daytime with closed curtains at 150 nits. Higher it starts to burn my retinas. I can only imagine how bright 10,000 nits is.
Sorry, I worded that wrong, I meant that the official spec requires no more that 1k nits, not 10k. 10k would blind you lol. And yeah, those OLED ones look especially jaw-dropping
 
Sorry, I worded that wrong, I meant that the official spec requires no more that 1k nits, not 10k. 10k would blind you lol. And yeah, those OLED ones look especially jaw-dropping
The official specification is actually 10k for full HDR effect. If HDR is mastered properly it shouldn’t burn your retinas. 10,000 just gives it a little more headroom for highlights and bright objects not the whole image, that’ll blind you lol. It should give really good contrast from dark to bright objects in the image. There’s already a 10k prototype from Sony.

They claim that HDR will give you real life like image but that what they said for every tv in the past. That’s what they said for rec.709 and SDR. It’s just marketing. Sunlight itself is 1 billion nits. Certain reflections is higher than 10k. It won’t be real life, but 10k is better than the Tv’s we have right now. And 10,000 nits was the max Dolby found in their research to be comfortable for viewing that is mastered properly.
 
Last edited by SG854,
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The official specification is actually 10k for full HDR effect. If HDR is mastered properly it shouldn’t burn your retinas. 10,000 just gives it a little more headroom for highlights and bright objects not the whole image, that’ll blind you lol. It should give really good contrast from dark to bright objects in the image. There’s already a 10k prototype from Sony.

They claim that HDR will give you real life like image but that what they said for every tv in the past. That’s what they said for rec.709 and SDR. It’s just marketing. Sunlight itself is 1 billion nits. Certain reflections is higher than 10k. It won’t be real life, but 10k is better than the Tv’s we have right now. And 10,000 nits was the max Dolby found in their research to be comfortable for viewing that is mastered properly.
I went over VESA's guidelines and it seems 10K is the max that HDR10+ can handle. VESA seems to expect 600, 800 and 1k on the market and has those numbers on its page.
10k has been demonstrated, but what kind of backlight do you need for even local 10k, a 1W per LED array? I'm curious



.......how did we get from dick jokes to nerding out over display standards again lol?:rofl:
 
I went over VESA's guidelines and it seems 10K is the max that HDR10+ can handle. VESA seems to expect 600, 800 and 1k on the market and has those numbers on its page.
10k has been demonstrated, but what kind of backlight do you need for even local 10k, a 1W per LED array? I'm curious



.......how did we get from dick jokes to nerding out over display standards again lol?:rofl:
A dick joke about tv’s lol. It’s a Noctosphere thread. Don’t expect much, ha ha.

Vesa has a much lower requirement. HDR10+ is mastered at 1,000 nits but can go up to 4,000. Dolby Vision is mastered at 4,000 but goes up to 10,000.

Current best TVs max out at 2,500. So home TVs can’t meet minimum requirement for dolby’s format right now. But Dolby is more future proof.

So many formats. The battle between HDR standards is like the battle between HDDVD and Blueray, at least between content makers. One will win. Then they can get standards sorted out. Tv’s should technically be able to support multiple hdr formats.
 
Last edited by SG854,
A dick joke about tv’s lol. It’s a Noctosphere thread. Don’t expect much, ha ha.

Vesa has a much lower requirement. HDR10+ is mastered at 1,000 nits but can go up to 4,000. Dolby Vision is mastered at 4,000 but goes up to 10,000.

Current best TVs max out at 2,500. So home TVs can’t meet minimum requirement for dolby’s format right now. But Dolby is more future proof.

So many formats. The battle between HDR standards is like the battle between HDDVD and Blueray. One will win. Then they can get standards sorted out.
what do you mean by "Don't expect much"?:angry::angry::angry:




jk i'm very aware of what you mean
 
My old boyfriend had an absolutely masive one. The biggest I have ever seen. I used to stare at it in amazement all day. It brought me so much joy. Then I got rid of the boyfriend and I am now left at home with my tiny Bush.

And yes you dirty lot I'm talking about TV size.
 
Last edited by AmandaRose,
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My old boyfriend had an absolutely masive one. The biggest I have ever seen. I used to stare at it in amazement all day. It brought me so much joy. Then I got rid of the boyfriend and am left at home with my tiny Bush.

And yes you dirty lot I'm talking about TV size.
Its 12AM, Everyone in my house is asleep(:creep:), and you lost me for a sec there
Edit: had me
 
Last edited by grey72,

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