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VESA Announces the DisplayHDR v1.0 Specification : HDR is coming to monitors

llien

Member
The Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) today announced it has defined the display industry's first fully open standard specifying high dynamic range (HDR) quality, including luminance, color gamut, bit depth and rise time, through the release of a test specification. The new VESA High-Performance Monitor and Display Compliance Test Specification (DisplayHDR) initially addresses the needs of laptop displays and PC desktop monitors that use liquid crystal display (LCD) panels.

The first release of the specification, DisplayHDR version 1.0, establishes three distinct levels of HDR system performance to facilitate adoption of HDR throughout the PC market. HDR provides better contrast and color accuracy as well as more vibrant colors compared to Standard Dynamic Range (SDR) displays, and is gaining interest for a wide range of applications, including movie viewing, gaming, and creation of photo and video content.

VqcehLb.png


VESA developed the DisplayHDR specification with the input of more than two dozen active member companies. These members include major OEMs that make displays, graphic cards, CPUs, panels, display drivers and other components, as well as color calibration providers. A list of participating companies is available here.

Brand Confusion Necessitates Clearly Defined HDR Standard
HDR logos and brands abound, but until now, there has been no open standard with a fully transparent testing methodology. Since HDR performance details are typically not provided, consumers are unable to obtain meaningful performance information. With DisplayHDR, VESA aims to alleviate this problem by:
  • Creating a specification, initially for the PC industry, that will be shared publicly and transparently;
  • Developing an automated testing tool that end users can download to perform their own testing if desired; and
  • Delivering a robust set of test metrics for HDR that clearly articulate the performance level of the device being purchased.

What DisplayHDR Includes
The specification establishes three HDR performance levels for PC displays: baseline (DisplayHDR 400), mid-range (DisplayHDR 600) and high-end (DisplayHDR 1000). These levels are established and certified using eight specific parameter requirements and associated tests, which include:

  • Three peak luminance tests involving different scenarios - small spot/high luminance, brief period full-screen flash luminance, and optimized use in bright environments (e.g., outside daylight or bright office lighting);
  • Two contrast measurement tests - one for native panel contrast and one for local dimming;
  • Color testing of both the BT.709 and DCI-P3 color gamuts;
  • Bit-depth requirement tests - these stipulate a minimum bit depth and include a simple visual test for end users to confirm results;
  • HDR response performance test - sets performance criteria for backlight responsiveness ideal for gaming and rapid action in movies by analyzing the speed at which the backlight can respond to changes in luminance levels.

"We selected 400 nits as the DisplayHDR specification's entry point for three key reasons," said Roland Wooster, chairman of the VESA task group responsible for DisplayHDR, and the association's representative from Intel Corp. for HDR display technology. "First, 400 nits is 50 percent brighter than typical SDR laptop displays. Second, the bit depth requirement is true 8-bit, whereas the vast majority of SDR panels are only 6-bit with dithering to simulate 8-bit video. Finally, the DisplayHDR 400 spec requires HDR-10 support and global dimming at a minimum. With this tiered specification, ranging from baseline to high-end HDR performance levels, PC makers will finally have consistent, measurable HDR performance parameters. Also, when buying a new PC, consumers will be able to view an HDR rating number that is meaningful and will reflect actual performance."

"Developing this specification is a natural expansion of our range of video standards," said Bill Lempesis, VESA executive director. "Moreover, we are the first standards body to develop a publicly available test tool for HDR qualification, utilizing a methodology for the above-mentioned tests that end users can apply without having to invest in costly lab hardware. Most of the tests require only a colorimeter, which many users already own. Ease of testing was a must-have requirement in order to make DisplayHDR a truly viable, consumer-friendly spec."

New products complying with the DisplayHDR specification will be demonstrated at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), January 9-12, 2018 at the Las Vegas Convention Center South Hall, DisplayPort booth #21066.

Techpowerup


Q: Soo... what is it?
A: Sort of "Ultra HD Premium" (TV certification) for PC world.

Q: Is it good?
A: For brightness it goes from "brighter than bright notebooks" (400 nit) to "on par with Ultra HD Premium TVs" (1000 nit). However, it only mandates 8 bit color depth (about 17 million colors), short of 10 bit (1 billion colors).

Practical difference between 8 bit and 10 bit color depth:
FJRoz03.png
 

laxu

Member
I don't know why they even bothered with the tiers. Will HDR at such low max brightness work even decently? Will the much shorter viewing distance allow that as you typically watch a TV from much further away? So it's not like a bright screen is blasting into your eyes from close up.

Not requiring 10-bit display is also a bummer, would have helped push 10-bit forward.
 

Spukc

always chasing the next thrill
If getting an HDR screen wasnt fucking confusing enough allready.

Thanks 😂
 

llien

Member
If getting an HDR screen wasnt fucking confusing enough allready.

Thanks ��

I don't see how it gets more confusing with this initiative.

TVs have problem of having only single "premium" level, and there is nothing to differentiate below that.

DisplayHDR X Certified will guarantee that:
Screen dishes out X nits.
At least 8 bit matrix used.
At least full screen dimming is used.
Supports HDR10 (royalty free standard)
(I'm speculating) wider color gamut.
Way to pass HDR content via display port (speculating again)

Where as at the moment "HDR" on a monitor tells you next to nothing about its capabilities.
 

JP

Member
Its good to see this finally happening, it's something that has really been needed. I just hope they've made the right choices here.
If getting an HDR screen wasnt fucking confusing enough allready.

Thanks ��
How could this possibly make it more confusing? We've gone from every single HDR panel being sold with a HDR badge, which meant very little, to them all now fitting into one of three clearly defined quantitate groups?

HDR is only a standard in the absolute vaguest of terms which means that if you buy two panels which have been labelled as HDR, it really tells you nothing about those panels.

UHD Premium is already a thing but it's something that only really illustrates that you're buying a panel which is pretty good "at the moment". A current UHD Premium panel in five years will anything but premium as there are technologies which will be common then which aren't even available now.

Due to this having three benchmarks that are quantifiable simplifies matters greatly. Maybe five years down the line they'll add a 2000 category but doing that doesn't change the quality of previously rated panels as this based on specific requirements rather than a vague concept such as UHD Premium or an ever vaguer concept such as "HDR".
 

TaurezAG

Member
I would have preferred if they made 10-bit and DCI-P3 as minspec but otherwise this is a step in the right direction IMO. Looking forward to the new monitor announcements at E3 2018.
 

drotahorror

Member
Since 8 bit is mandated, does that just mean it's the minimum? And that 10 bit would be available too?

I'm eagerly awaiting 1440p, 144hz, 10bit, 1000nit, HDR.
 

J-Rzez

Member
Lol wow. 1000nits 12-24" from your face. No thanks. HDR400 rating is more suitable. When calibrated, target is way lower usually, so youll just get peaks.

But at least we're getting somewhere.

I just recently got a Samsung 27" QLED 144hz QHD monitor, and its VA. And its really good compared to most monitors. But they still need to improve these further, and at reasonable prices. Still waiting for a $1000 OLED monitor from LG. 27-32"pls.
 

llien

Member
Since 8 bit is mandated, does that just mean it's the minimum?

And that 10 bit would be available too?
It will certify, if available. (whether manufacturers have interest in doing that, is nother question)

I'm eagerly awaiting 1440p, 144hz, 10bit, 1000nit, HDR.
1000nit is more than most people think it is, even watching my TV from 5 meters I feel uncomfortable, sitting next to it can be outright painful experience.
 

dr_rus

Member
HDR400 is disappointing since it's essentially legalizes the "not-really-HDR" displays as HDR. 600 and 1000 are fine although I would probably prefer to have a requirement of supporting 12 bits for the highest tier.
 

Meh3D

Member
HDR400 is disappointing since it's essentially legalizes the "not-really-HDR" displays as HDR. 600 and 1000 are fine although I would probably prefer to have a requirement of supporting 12 bits for the highest tier.

I disagree.

There is more than just the brightness that will keep displays from becoming something they are not overnight. The VESA chairman, Roland Wooster, addresses this directly. On the topic of brightness, I think viewing distance has to be taken into account. At about 4 ft my Samsung KS8000 gets bright enough to bother my eyes. (It's also a common complaint from my roommates and boyfriend.) There is no way I could use KS8000 at any close distance regularly compared to a tablet, or a computer monitor. I could see the need for the HDR 600 and HDR 400 specs for a range of devices based on the amount of time the screen will be turned on and viewed by the user and distance from the user.

I am disappointed on the bit specification though. I would have wanted 8 + 2FRC as the minimum entry level spec.
 

J-Rzez

Member
Is there any monitor on the market at the moment, that can hit even 400 nits?

I might be unlucky at clicking on the right one:
http://www.tftcentral.co.uk/reviews.htm

All I see is quite below it. (cd/m^2 or candela per square meter is the same as nit)
E.g. Dell's "HDR" monitor with 10 bit matrix, peaks at 350 nit:

http://www.tftcentral.co.uk/reviews/dell_up2718q.htm

This is what I just got.
https://www.rtings.com/monitor/reviews/samsung/chg70-curved-gaming-monitor

Its surprisingly good. It gets plenty bright imho. Contrast is nice since VA, no IPS glow. Very responsive, handles motion really well. I tried out HDR on Destiny 2, looked really good frankly.

Is it OLED or Z9D level of HDR? No. But it's surprisingly good, at a really fair price. Will hold me over until OLED monitors hopefully.

Only thing that still gets me is how poorly windows handles HDR.
 
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