Soldato
- Joined
- 27 Mar 2013
- Posts
- 9,313
The reason I said it was that I'm sure I read a w few years ago that Netflix will never separate 4k from hdr (mainly as there are very few if any 1080 sets that do hdr.
Last week on 25th Sep. Star Trek Discovery Premierd in 4k HDR/DV in the UK.
This week on 2nd Oct it's limited to 1080p HDR/DV.
I called Netflix & they said they don't have a licence to stream the Netflix show in 4k, something about the producers & they didn't know when they can get a 4k license.
Does anyone know when Netflix will allow the UK to watch this in 4k again?
Is it in 4k in the US & if so would a VPN work? Anyone know a VPN that works
netflix had been making hdr available for sony 1080p tvs, and reecent iphone/apple hdr streams.
..but with a poorer broadband speed, at what point is crossing from downgraded dash bitrate 15,13,11,9 Mb/s at 4K to a 1080 stream giving better perceived PQ.
BBC reduce Iplayer resolution.
...What's also disappointing is that its original content (so far, just Star Trek: Discovery) caps out at 1080p. Both Netflix and Amazon have committed to presenting their high-budget original series in 4K resolution, sometimes even with HDR color features. Star Trek: Discovery has neither, even though UHD benefits science-fiction more than almost any other genre.
That's still a resolution license if what the OP says is true. Whether it's been natively shot in that resolution or not.There isn't one. Discovery wasn't shot in 4k. It's not available in 4k. If it is, it's upscaled. So pointless.
When you watch on large screens then the lack of 4k is very noticeable.To be honest I didn't notice it wasn't 4K, and I have a 65" OLED.
It was broadcast in Dolby Vision on Netflix though, and I could see that was definitely the case. The boosters on her jumpsuit looked really bright at one point.
4) How good your eyesight is.Well that would depends entirely on various factors such as:
1) How close you are to the screen
2) How good your TV's upscaling is
3) The quality of your Netflix app
65" is pretty big and I didn't notice being 10ft away.
When you start getting up to large screens like 100" or bigger there is a clear noticeable difference between 4k Netflix and 1080p. Saying that I would have thought 4k would ne a noticeable diffrance even on smaller screens like 65".Well that would depends entirely on various factors such as:
1) How close you are to the screen
2) How good your TV's upscaling is
3) The quality of your Netflix app
65" is pretty big and I didn't notice being 10ft away.