Hey there, so I've certainly made a lot of progress with my journey to play HDR films on my computer. The firmware issue with my Pioneer drive has been fixed. I installed Infuse, which can properly handle HDR formats. I was informed that I need to play Dolby Vision files in Dolby Vision 8 for Macs, so I installed the software DV7 to DV8. Now, I have everything I need to playback HDR files in their intended formats.
However, I still have an issue with blooming on my laptop monitor, unless I adjust brightness. (when it's at full brightness, there's a considerable amount of blooming, when I lower it to about 50%, I am able to get rid of most of the blooming)
I wanted to just ask the question on the forum to see what options are available to me. From what I understand, my options may be limited, because this could be an issue with the limitations of my monitor as a mini-LED display? Is dimming my monitor when viewing HDR films my best option? (and watching in a dark room)
Blooming on Macbook Pro with HDR files
Re: Blooming on Macbook Pro with HDR files
Or spend $$$$ for micro-LED (or get a OLED).
You can't really stop bleeding with backlights, it's just not financially viable yet and I'm sure even micro-LED has the problem to an extent.
Bring plasma back...??? Plasma TV's were horrible for the environment during the boom era ~15 years ago because so many were sold, but TV sales have plummeted year-over-year for years now. Even if they hadn't plummeted, the audience for a new plasma TV is not the same audience for the latest Wal-Mart $299 Vizio, so many less plasmas would be sold than during the boom era.
You can't really stop bleeding with backlights, it's just not financially viable yet and I'm sure even micro-LED has the problem to an extent.
Bring plasma back...??? Plasma TV's were horrible for the environment during the boom era ~15 years ago because so many were sold, but TV sales have plummeted year-over-year for years now. Even if they hadn't plummeted, the audience for a new plasma TV is not the same audience for the latest Wal-Mart $299 Vizio, so many less plasmas would be sold than during the boom era.
Re: Blooming on Macbook Pro with HDR files
Assuming you have an Apple Silicon era MacBook Pro, the display is a mini-LED backlight setup with something like 10,000 zones. The performance in general is pretty good.
https://www.techspot.com/review/2365-apple-macbook-pro-xdr-display/
As flojo points out, however, the only way to truly eliminate blooming is to use a self-lit display, like OLED.
In Apple land, the iPad Pro has a very fancy tandem OLED screen Apple calls Ultra Retina XDR. Reviews suggest it has no blooming at all, as one would expect of a self-lit display like OLED.
https://www.techradar.com/tablets/ipad-pro/ipad-pro-13-inch-2024#section-ipad-pro-13-inch-2024-review-display
The current rumors suggest MacBook Pros might get an OLED screen in 2026 or 2027.
If you want a desktop monitor something like this (https://www.rtings.com/monitor/reviews/asus/rog-swift-oled-pg27ucdm) for $1200 in the USA is a high-end 4K OLED monitor with zero blooming.
https://www.techspot.com/review/2365-apple-macbook-pro-xdr-display/
As flojo points out, however, the only way to truly eliminate blooming is to use a self-lit display, like OLED.
In Apple land, the iPad Pro has a very fancy tandem OLED screen Apple calls Ultra Retina XDR. Reviews suggest it has no blooming at all, as one would expect of a self-lit display like OLED.
https://www.techradar.com/tablets/ipad-pro/ipad-pro-13-inch-2024#section-ipad-pro-13-inch-2024-review-display
The current rumors suggest MacBook Pros might get an OLED screen in 2026 or 2027.
If you want a desktop monitor something like this (https://www.rtings.com/monitor/reviews/asus/rog-swift-oled-pg27ucdm) for $1200 in the USA is a high-end 4K OLED monitor with zero blooming.
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auroraaspire
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- Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2024 3:59 am
Re: Blooming on Macbook Pro with HDR files
Reducing brightness helps, but I think that's pretty much the only fix unless Apple magically adds more dimming zones in future models.