Netflix announced that it was Adding streaming streaming HDR10+on top of the existing HDR10 and Dolby Vision Formats that are already offered in the streaming service. HDR10+ should offer greater visual accuracy based on often dark original Netflix programming.
The company allows HDR10+ with the AV1 codec, specification Originally released in 2018 This gradually becomes the standard of stream 4K without data. Netflix first accepted AV1 as a way for Help customers save data While watching on your phone, but the compression technology works just as well for the streaming of large HDR files. Netflix now allows HDR10+ in some popular names and hopes in the end to offer all HDR content in a new format. Anyone who has a Netflix Premium subscription and a device that supports both HDR10+and AV1 (which includes most modern mobile phones and tablets) should be able to watch the compatible content in HDR10+.
After 4K, the high dynamic range (HDR) began to determine the appearance of modern television and films, especially on streaming. The HDR content makes it clear to understand the sharp differences between the light and dark parts of the image. The insufficient, dirty quality of modern streaming television is often due to the expectation that the audience will view on the device that supports HDR. Without this, you do not see anything. With it, you can pick up all the different shades of gray, which have become the norm in prestigious television.
Netflix first released HDR support in 2016 With a debut Marco PoloAnd during the years, since then he has made the support of the Dolby Vision and HDR10, the most common HDR format, the norm in his service. If you watched Netflix on the display that Dolby Vision is already using, you probably will not notice the difference, but if you offer only HDR10+, adding support for the format should do all the best.