First, a question about vision backups without vision capability in the playback chain . Does vision content revert to hdr10?
Now regarding two titles, oceans eight and mission impossible fallout. Have these been successfully backed up? Will these stream to a vision capable tv?
Dolby vision disks
Re: Dolby vision disks
If you are backing up to MKV, Dolby Vision is not supported in that container. The result will default to HDR10. If you are backing up the whole disc to folder and then burn it to another disc, then maybe.
Re: Dolby vision disks
Interesting. So streaming vision requires a different container...I wonder what Mike will do!
Re: Dolby vision disks
1. Yes. DV is only a layer on top of HDR10. HDR10 is mostly a requirement for UHD content. With the exemption of a few titles who fell out of compliance. If somewhere the playback chain does NOT support DV it defaults to baseline HDR10 metadata per compliance.
2. Yes. Variations of those UHD discs have been backed up.
2. Yes. Variations of those UHD discs have been backed up.
Re: Dolby vision disks
It’s currently a limitation with the MKV container in certain scenarios. MKV app developers like Mike and/or developers of PC renderers like madshi (developer of MadVR) would need access to the DV source code. However, that code is Dolby proprietary closed source code which requires very expensive licensing and those who want to be licensed have to meet strict industry requirements.
Re: Dolby vision disks
Put a different way, not even PowerDVD licenses Dolby Vision for playback on a PC. Nor do most streamers (currently). So even if you had an MKV with DV, playback options would still be very limited.
Re: Dolby vision disks
I guess when one of the streaming service providers starts offering DV content, the media players will have to support it. Or maybe Dolby wants to license only disk spinners with hdmi outputs ...
Re: Dolby vision disks
The streaming services already do offer DV. Netflix, Vudu, Amazon Prime has started to I believe....if your equipment doesn't support it, then it drops back to HDR10. Not everyone wants to PAY to license DV....something Dolby vastly overestimates. With HDR10+ now making its way out into the world, the benefits of DV while having to license it are certainly dwindling. Does DV look fantastic? No question. Is it worth having everything in your chain license it, adding extra cost to everything you buy? Jury's still out on that one.
Re: Dolby vision disks
Agreed on the dv philosophy and the drama unfolding . The money grab must not be large though or we wouldn't see sub $200 spinners with hdmi output and budget priced TVs with dv. But I agree the complexity, drama, and politics it requires is much greater than any advantage it may have, if any, over hdr10+. Let the format wars ensue!
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Re: Dolby vision disks
HDR10 + works with a MKV.
Itself tested with an Oppo 205.
The MKV movie "Bad Times at the El Royale" was played over a network by the Nas.
Itself tested with an Oppo 205.
The MKV movie "Bad Times at the El Royale" was played over a network by the Nas.
Re: Dolby vision disks
If only LG would add support for it. But it's not going to happen because they're firmly in the dv camp. Sigh. Didn't we already play this game once? It was called hd DVD vs Blu-ray.
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