1-5 of 5 Answers
NO BUT IT DONT MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THE HDR IS JUST BEATIFUL
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Who uses it? Well for starters Amazon Prime (all HDR titles exclusively), Paramount (all HDR titles), Hulu (all HDR titles), Google Movies (VOD), YouTube and others like Rakuten TV (not avail in the US). There's a respectable amount of titles on UHD Blu-ray too and all the new A/V Receivers and IoT devices recently added support. Point is there is actually a quite a lot HDR10+ content now but you don't know this because the consortium makes zero effort in a way consumers would understand with promo videos or logo usage for awareness. All dynamic HDR formats are static HDR back compatible anyway so Samsung owners/buyers have literally nothing to worry about, you will get ALL HDR where it's available, including dynamic 10+ on the above streaming platforms. If people didn't just drink and repeat marketing koolaid by Dolby (helped in part by paid shill tech reporters) and actually understood how HDR works they'd know that the lions share of the performance and viewing experience is coming from the capability of the display and how well mastered (and encoded) the content you are watching is. Dynamic metadata while certainly helpful is merely the garnish-- the cherry on top. I happily purchased the S95B to replace a 4 year old Sony OLED which had a bad pixel. Can't wait to see how it stacks up to Panasonic's custom WRGB OLED panel.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.2022 Samsung S95B don’t support Dolby Vision
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Nope! Huge miss in my opinion. Who uses HDR10+ anyways lol .. Samsung, just pay for the spec. You'll sell more TVs.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.According to the specs, that would be a no. HDR 10, HDR 10+, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) are the only HDR formats compatible. Well, that nixes this tv for me,
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