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The standard is mainly used in computer monitors and laptops. VESA defines a set of HDR levels; all of them must support HDR10, but not all are required to support 10-bit displays. [67] DisplayHDR is not an HDR format, but a tool to verify HDR formats and their performance on a given monitor.
Luminance HDR, formerly Qtpfsgui, is graphics software used for the creation and manipulation of high-dynamic-range images. Released under the terms of the GPL, it is available for Linux, Windows and Mac OS X (Intel only). Luminance HDR supports several High Dynamic Range (HDR) as well as Low Dynamic Range (LDR) file formats.
Dolby Vision is a set of technologies developed by Dolby Laboratories for high dynamic range (HDR) video. [1] [2] [3] It covers content creation, distribution, and playback.[1] [4] [5] [6] It includes dynamic metadata that define the aspect ratio and adjust the picture based on a display's capabilities on a per-shot or even per-frame basis, optimizing the presentation.
The Sony α1 [66] and Sony α7 IV [67] offer capturing images in 10-bit HEIF format with an HDR format that uses HLG. The Fujifilm X-H2S, [68] Fujifilm X-H2, [69] Fujifilm X-T5, [70] and Fujifilm X100VI [71] offers a choice of JPEG or 10-bit HEIF file formats. The Nikon Z9 and Nikon Z8 offer 10-bit HEIF file formats.
High-dynamic-range rendering (HDRR) is the real-time rendering and display of virtual environments using a dynamic range of 65,535:1 or higher (used in computer, gaming, and entertainment technology). [6] HDRR does not require a HDR display and originally used tone mapping to display the rendering on a standard dynamic range display.
FP16 blending can be used as a faster way to render HDR in video games. Shader Model 4.0 is a feature of DirectX 10, which has been released with Windows Vista. Shader Model 4.0 allows 128-bit HDR rendering, as opposed to 64-bit HDR in Shader Model 3.0 (although this is theoretically possible under Shader Model 3.0).
Logo. HDR10+ [1] is a high dynamic range (HDR) video technology that adds dynamic metadata [2] to HDR10 source files. The dynamic metadata are used to adjust and optimize each frame of the HDR video to the consumer display's capabilities in a way based on the content creator's intentions.
It contains many new features including Chromecast output support (except subtitles [43]), hardware-accelerated decoding enabled by default, 4K and 8K playback, 10-bit and HDR playback, 360° video and 3D audio, audio passthrough for HD audio codecs, BD-J menu support, and local network drive browsing.