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Posted by guurrrr
 - November 24, 2023, 13:50:39
Quote from: TruthIsThere on November 22, 2023, 16:27:51So, "up to" 10,000, right? Meaning in practice about a third/half of that, ~3300 "up to" 5000 in normal conditions, huh?

Quote from: TruthIsThere on November 22, 2023, 16:27:51So, "up to" 10,000, right? Meaning in practice about a third/half of that, ~3300 "up to" 5000 in normal conditions, huh?

I mean thats rearlly high still. Generally the whole screen isnt lit that bright 10K is the peak of Dolby Vision. 1000 nits is already considered high end if you can get the whole screen lit that bright then you're already better than like  90% of TV's on the market. If it was 5000 in normal conditions that would be exceedingly bright still. You ony need like 2000-4000 nit peaks to reach peak brightness in the highest end moveis on only like 10-15% of the screen, almost nodody has scene that are 4000nits full screen or brighter and its usually for scenes that dont last too long. Most film masterers dont even use more than 1000 nit brightness to master and grade movies.

It just future proofs you for future content. The biggest hurdle tho is the processing. Hisense & TCL are huge value in the MiniLED market w/ an insane number of Local dimming zones but the issue is their scene detection, scene movement, & image processing is really mid tier. This is how Sony has been able to compete using MiniLED displays w/ only 80-500 local dimming zones but still have far less blooming and control than Hisense displays.
Posted by TruthIsThere
 - November 22, 2023, 16:27:51
So, "up to" 10,000, right? Meaning in practice about a third/half of that, ~3300 "up to" 5000 in normal conditions, huh?
Posted by Redaktion
 - November 22, 2023, 15:30:35
Hisense has announced a new TV that should be able to impress with an almost absurdly high brightness and numerous dimming zones. In particular, content with a high contrast range should be easy to reproduce.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Hisense-110UX-Mini-LED-TV-promises-extremely-high-contrast-images-thanks-to-10-000-cd-m2-and-40-000-dimming-zones.771464.0.html