The quote that a picture can tell a 1000 words is proving to be a lot bigger deal than ever thought.
![[Image: JalNqX2.png]](https://i.imgur.com/JalNqX2.png)
![[Image: 3NKjPGy.png]](https://i.imgur.com/3NKjPGy.png)
That's what you call an instant deconfuser.
Also no more YCbCr ... with Rec. 2100 things will be in ICtCp https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICtCp
Pretty much most of the old stuff is going to get obsolete, so the learning process should not wait.
https://vimeo.com/176095324
Sadly the full presentation from Dr. Sean McCarthy on The Power of Color from 2016 Cable-Tec expo doesn't exist on the web, or just too hard to find.
Well, let's remember the whole thing is a recommendation, not a requirement, that's what Rec. stands for. That's how things are right now, you get a panel with big differences between manufacturers, price ranges, none of the consumer TVs and monitors are professionally calibrated either, ofcourse as the technologies and pipelines mature you eventually get most stuff 99.9% conforming with the standar... err recommendation. These things are recommendation because you'd see a lot of companies go out of business, it's super demanding consumer business which forces Samsung to use panel lottery, which means, you have a 40-60% chance that when you buy an average TV you might get a panel that's a lot crappier than what you paid for, that's because Samsung's suppliers can't produce so much fast enough they have to go to crappier suppliers to meet consumer demand, extremely deceptive and borderline criminal practice because you can't know that until you unpack and actually disassemble it or peek through the ventilation holes for the labels internally, because the external TV's basic model name is exactly the same, I think only the premium models don't have panel lottery.
The early new hardware will be again the wild jungle, you'll only have like 80% Rec. 2020 gamut conformance, I think there was one some months ago presented at some event I think.
EDIT: There we go, one samsung is just above 80% on uv but 76% on xy - they don't have the marketing for Rec. 2020 WCG so they use this "100%" thing and in the small text it says it's about DCI-P3 so there you go.
https://www.rtings.com/tv/tests/picture-quality/wide-color-gamut-rec-709-dci-p3-rec-2020
https://www.samsung.com/us/televisions-home-theater/tvs/qled-tvs/65-class-q7f-4k-smart-qled-tv-qn65q7fnafxza/
![[Image: JalNqX2.png]](https://i.imgur.com/JalNqX2.png)
![[Image: 3NKjPGy.png]](https://i.imgur.com/3NKjPGy.png)
That's what you call an instant deconfuser.
Also no more YCbCr ... with Rec. 2100 things will be in ICtCp https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICtCp
Pretty much most of the old stuff is going to get obsolete, so the learning process should not wait.
https://vimeo.com/176095324
Sadly the full presentation from Dr. Sean McCarthy on The Power of Color from 2016 Cable-Tec expo doesn't exist on the web, or just too hard to find.
(05-23-2018, 10:56 AM)AnyOldName3 Wrote: i.e. it doesn't define a specific bit depth that you have to use, instead letting you choose between two options. The paragraphs immediately following this don't say that 12-bit covers a wider colour space, so I read it to mean that they both cover the same colour space.
Well, let's remember the whole thing is a recommendation, not a requirement, that's what Rec. stands for. That's how things are right now, you get a panel with big differences between manufacturers, price ranges, none of the consumer TVs and monitors are professionally calibrated either, ofcourse as the technologies and pipelines mature you eventually get most stuff 99.9% conforming with the standar... err recommendation. These things are recommendation because you'd see a lot of companies go out of business, it's super demanding consumer business which forces Samsung to use panel lottery, which means, you have a 40-60% chance that when you buy an average TV you might get a panel that's a lot crappier than what you paid for, that's because Samsung's suppliers can't produce so much fast enough they have to go to crappier suppliers to meet consumer demand, extremely deceptive and borderline criminal practice because you can't know that until you unpack and actually disassemble it or peek through the ventilation holes for the labels internally, because the external TV's basic model name is exactly the same, I think only the premium models don't have panel lottery.
The early new hardware will be again the wild jungle, you'll only have like 80% Rec. 2020 gamut conformance, I think there was one some months ago presented at some event I think.
EDIT: There we go, one samsung is just above 80% on uv but 76% on xy - they don't have the marketing for Rec. 2020 WCG so they use this "100%" thing and in the small text it says it's about DCI-P3 so there you go.
https://www.rtings.com/tv/tests/picture-quality/wide-color-gamut-rec-709-dci-p3-rec-2020
https://www.samsung.com/us/televisions-home-theater/tvs/qled-tvs/65-class-q7f-4k-smart-qled-tv-qn65q7fnafxza/
