It depends, as far as movies and TV goes. It depends with how it was shot/rendered, how it is was processed, how it was converted for home delivery, etc., that, all in addition to the actual cinematography of the film, the locations/sets used. A million variables. A movie/tv show saying it's HDR really means nothing unless it can benefit from it. Modern Family in HDR will show little to no benefit compared to a rescanning of Children of Men's negative to widen the dynamic range.I've never actually seen HDR in person. Is it that noticeable? I'm not one to buy the best of the best when it comes to tech, but it seems that this is going to be the future.
I need a new monitor (I use my monitor as a console gaming screen too) but I'm not sure if the extra bang is worth the buck.
That's a really good point.It depends, as far as movies and TV goes. It depends with how it was shot/rendered, how it is was processed, how it was converted for home delivery, etc., that, all in addition to the actual cinematography of the film, the locations/sets used. A million variables. A movie/tv show saying it's HDR really means nothing unless it can benefit from it. Modern Family in HDR will show little to no benefit compared to a rescanning of Children of Men's negative to widen the dynamic range.
5K is surprisingly cheap. I was expecting it to cost at least double, if not triple that cost.Meh...4K PC monitors are soooo 2016.
Dell’s 8K monitor is a sublime $4,999 luxury for the pros
http://www.theverge.com/2017/1/5/14098224/dell-up3218k-8k-computer-monitor-price-features-ces-2017
I've never actually seen HDR in person. Is it that noticeable? I'm not one to buy the best of the best when it comes to tech, but it seems that this is going to be the future.
I need a new monitor (I use my monitor as a console gaming screen too) but I'm not sure if the extra bang is worth the buck.