oui, enfin plutôt est ce que LG va réellement le faire ? (et ne pas trainer en longueur pour laisser tomber dans quelques mois)Becuwe Nicolas wrote:
C'est à dire ? Tu veux savoir quoi ? A quelle date sera publié ce firmware ?
c'est vrai que c'est bizarre ces limitations sur le signal d'entrée : en 10 bits, on doit passer en 4:2:0 , 4:2:2 et 4:4:4 et ce depuis le hdmi 1.4 :^)Becuwe Nicolas wrote: Par contre, pour le 2160p 10 bits en 4:4:4 (RGB ou YCbCr) là même avec le PC Dav n'a pas réussi à l'afficher. Et je crois que je viens de comprendre le souci avec le boitier ISF. Car Dav n'a pas réussi à avoir du 10 bits en 4:2:0, mais uniquement en 4:2:2 en activant l'UHD Color ! C'est bizarre :^)
Edit : juste pour info, un américain a réussi à envoyer un signal HDR via hdmi avec un boitier Dish Hopper 3 (et pas usb ou pas l'app intégré Amazon )
ici
I have the 55EF9500 and just upgraded to the Hopper 3 from the Hopper w/Sling (HWS).
I was initially shocked that I saw the "HDR is now on" banner pop up (just like it had done previously when I went to Amazon using the TV app and clicking on an Ultra show). I checked the picture settings and, sure enough, the Contrast and the OLED Backlight controls were grayed out. My thought was since the new Hopper is 4K that it was sending a meta tag to the LG to turn on its HDR circuits.
I was puzzled the next day to find out it was no longer doing that and figured either Dish or LG had made a change in their software and squashed the "bug". However, I rebooted the Hopper and when it came back up, it tripped the LG's HDR circuits again. So where I'm at now, I think the Hopper loses the HDR metadata with the nightly update, but a reboot brings it back.
Dish Hopper 3 Technical Specs
Hopper 3 is powered by a Broadcom BCM7445 quad-core ARM application processor at 1.5 GHz, 21K DMIPS. It contains a two TB hard drive for up to 500 hours of high-definition recording (or 2,000 hours of standard definition recording). For 4K viewing, the Hopper 3 can decode and output 60 FPS and 10-bit color. It supports H.264 and H.265 and is compatible with HDMI 2.0 and HDCP 2.2. It is the first DVR to support USB 3.0. Hopper 3 is compatible with HDR10/BDA 2.0 encoded streams.
HopperGO has 64 GB of flash memory and connects to Hopper 2 and Hopper 3 via a micro USB.