HDR videos on smart TVs usually come in several different formats-including HLG, Dolby Vision, HDR10 and HDR10+. But Dolby Vision is by far the most popular. Therefore, when Samsung, the world's largest TV manufacturer, chooses to use HDR10+ instead of Dolby Vision, it has to arouse people's curiosity.
Samsung has stated that it will not support Dolby Vision due to increased manufacturing costs and additional licensing fees. However, this is also because it believes that its TV processing system and hardware are said to be able to optimize HDR 10 images without Dolby Vision. Therefore, Samsung decided to exclusively support the royalty-free dynamic metadata HDR system HDR10+.
HDR10+ is a direct competitor of Dolby Vision (Dolby Vision), developed jointly by Samsung, 20th Century Fox and Warner Bros. But with TV manufacturers such as Hisense, Panasonic and Philips supporting both Dolby Vision and HDR10+, have Samsung users missed the opportunity?
Samsung has stated that it will not support Dolby Vision due to increased manufacturing costs and additional licensing fees. However, this is also because it believes that its TV processing system and hardware are said to be able to optimize HDR 10 images without Dolby Vision. Therefore, Samsung decided to exclusively support the royalty-free dynamic metadata HDR system HDR10+.
HDR10+ is a direct competitor of Dolby Vision (Dolby Vision), developed jointly by Samsung, 20th Century Fox and Warner Bros. But with TV manufacturers such as Hisense, Panasonic and Philips supporting both Dolby Vision and HDR10+, have Samsung users missed the opportunity?