Any pitular movie hopefully something that’s both sdr/hdr/dv
So we can compare the sdr bd version with the original dv if it’s fel huge diff I soposed compare to the bd.
Personally I only interested in the hdr10 to DV upconversion feature whether it's worth the hassle or not (it only works from mp4/ts, not mkv, and has a bug with hdr10+).Manixx2020beyound wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 10:29 amAny pitular movie hopefully something that’s both sdr/hdr/dv
So we can compare the sdr bd version with the original dv if it’s fel huge diff I soposed compare to the bd.
I can't do that comparison myself because my capture device doesn't support DV but Manix with his Atomos Shogun can do that. Could be interesting to see how it looks compared to HDR10 and also compared to FEL DV.
Perhaps he’s confusing it with the RPU?quietvoid wrote:The statement is incorrect, UHD BD does not include metadata as XML.HarperVision wrote: ↑Sun Apr 04, 2021 10:46 amSo what are the thoughts on what this professional videographer says about maintaining dynamic metadata (DV, HDR10+, etc.) when digitizing your UHD Bluray collection using mkv? It starts about the 11:52 mark:
https://youtu.be/1tDoWwSM-f8
It's encoded in the base HDR10 layer (for HDR10+) or in the separate HEVC stream (EL layer) for Dolby Vision.
The separate HEVC stream is already in sync with the base layer, so that decoders can decode both at the same time.
Can you please explain further the bolded above, or share some links? Thanks!RESET_9999 wrote: In other words, I'm kind of hardcoding the dynamic metadata and FEL into a static HDR10 stream. Just like manix does with his atomos shogun (except that he can do it with any input device.)
The RPU is contained in the second video track as well.
Thanks for clarifying!quietvoid wrote:The RPU is contained in the second video track as well.
In the original audio (in French), only XML is mentioned as being part of the original disc image outside of the video/m2ts. Which is false.
The Atomos shogun is a device that can monitor and record HDR (DV and HDR10). So once it receives any decoded DV signal (LLDV), it can capture/analyze it.HarperVision wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 8:11 pmCan you please explain further the bolded above, or share some links? Thanks!
Fake DV vs Real HDR10: https://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/12710

It only appears to brighten the image because it is now properly tone mapping the output to the display’s reported capabilities such as peak luminance, instead of sending 1,000 nit content to a display with less than that luminance available while using a static PQ curve, making the luminance levels fall in the incorrect place, making the scene darker than it should be.RESET_9999 wrote:Fake DV vs Real HDR10: https://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/12710
Real DV (p5 web) vs Real HDR10: https://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/12712
As you can see, it just brightens the image. I wouldn't recommend using the x700 HDR10/SDR to DV on the fly conversion.
This is incorrect if the display maps the colors and dynamic range as it should. If it doesn’t that’s on the display you’re using, not the player.azreil24 wrote:All Sony players convert everything to DV if you have the DV option activated. It sounds cool, but it isn't as it sends SDR content in DV container and messes up the colors and everything. At least that's how it works with discs and the reason I sold it, as I was tired of having to manually activate DV based on movie.
So, sending the natural movie peek 1000 nit brightness should clear up the artificial crushing of the blacksHarperVision wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 2:37 amIt only appears to brighten the image because it is now properly tone mapping the output to the display’s reported capabilities such as peak luminance, instead of sending 1,000 nit content to a display with less than that luminance available while using a static PQ curve, making the luminance levels fall in the incorrect place, making the scene darker than it should be.RESET_9999 wrote:Fake DV vs Real HDR10: https://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/12710
Real DV (p5 web) vs Real HDR10: https://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/12712
As you can see, it just brightens the image. I wouldn't recommend using the x700 HDR10/SDR to DV on the fly conversion.
In other words, what’s supposed to be at say digital 10 bit code 150 is now at that proper level, whereas before it was artificially being crushed and lowered to all 1,000 nits into say a 200 nit static container.
This is incorrect if the display maps the colors and dynamic range as it should. If it doesn’t that’s on the display you’re using, not the player.azreil24 wrote:All Sony players convert everything to DV if you have the DV option activated. It sounds cool, but it isn't as it sends SDR content in DV container and messes up the colors and everything. At least that's how it works with discs and the reason I sold it, as I was tired of having to manually activate DV based on movie.
Colors within any of the color gamuts will be completely identical whether they be Rec709, DCI-P3 or BT2020, up to each of their limits of course. So putting a Rec709 source into a wider P3 or BT2020 container should look and display identically when the gamuts are mapped properly since Rec709 is smaller than either of those wider gamuts. It’s not supposed to stretch the colors at all and if it does then your display is doing it wrong, not the source.
I have both an X700 and an X800M2 as well as an AppleTV 4K and they don’t have any of the issues reported with my displays because they map the signal correctly.
No I think you have it reversed and are thinking in the same terms as @RESET_9999.Manixx2020beyound wrote:So, sending the natural movie peek 1000 nit brightness should clear up the artificial crushing of the blacksHarperVision wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 2:37 amIt only appears to brighten the image because it is now properly tone mapping the output to the display’s reported capabilities such as peak luminance, instead of sending 1,000 nit content to a display with less than that luminance available while using a static PQ curve, making the luminance levels fall in the incorrect place, making the scene darker than it should be.RESET_9999 wrote: Fake DV vs Real HDR10: https://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/12710
Real DV (p5 web) vs Real HDR10: https://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/12712
As you can see, it just brightens the image. I wouldn't recommend using the x700 HDR10/SDR to DV on the fly conversion.
In other words, what’s supposed to be at say digital 10 bit code 150 is now at that proper level, whereas before it was artificially being crushed and lowered to all 1,000 nits into say a 200 nit static container.
This is incorrect if the display maps the colors and dynamic range as it should. If it doesn’t that’s on the display you’re using, not the player.azreil24 wrote:All Sony players convert everything to DV if you have the DV option activated. It sounds cool, but it isn't as it sends SDR content in DV container and messes up the colors and everything. At least that's how it works with discs and the reason I sold it, as I was tired of having to manually activate DV based on movie.
Colors within any of the color gamuts will be completely identical whether they be Rec709, DCI-P3 or BT2020, up to each of their limits of course. So putting a Rec709 source into a wider P3 or BT2020 container should look and display identically when the gamuts are mapped properly since Rec709 is smaller than either of those wider gamuts. It’s not supposed to stretch the colors at all and if it does then your display is doing it wrong, not the source.
I have both an X700 and an X800M2 as well as an AppleTV 4K and they don’t have any of the issues reported with my displays because they map the signal correctly.
Instead of the oled peek 700nit display.
Will test that method now again.
