Article 3XP5P HDR10+ is coming to new Samsung and Panasonic TVs, but good luck finding content

HDR10+ is coming to new Samsung and Panasonic TVs, but good luck finding content

by
Samuel Axon
from Ars Technica - All content on (#3XP5P)
The-Wall_2-800x451.jpg

Enlarge / Samsung's experimental "The Wall" TV. (credit: Samsung)

Certain Panasonic and Samsung TVs just became some of the first to support the new HDR10+ HDR standard thanks to a new firmware update. The update was rolled out to "select 2018 television models," according to a press release that was sent out today.

HDR10+ was developed by HDR10+ Technologies-a joint venture by 20th Century Fox, Panasonic, and Samsung-to offer an improvement to the existing HDR10 standard and compete directly with Dolby Vision. Like Dolby Vision, HDR10+ allows content creators to include dynamic metadata in each frame rather than simply applying the same approach to every frame in the scene.

Samsung, which is the leading driver of the HDR10+ standard, has argued that HDR10+ will allow film directors' visions to be more accurately represented on HDR TVs, because filmmakers who master their films in HDR can fine-tune each scene to their hearts' content. Dolby has made similar claims about Dolby Vision.

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