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YouTube HDR content is finally available!
You will find a playlist here. However, these clips will be played as SDR on Sonys for now.
With youtube-dl you can find vp9.2 encodings for those clips:
330 webm 256x144 144p60 156k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 2.38MiB 331 webm 426x240 240p60 256k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 3.87MiB 332 webm 640x360 360p60 485k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 7.35MiB 333 webm 854x480 480p60 909k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 13.83MiB 334 webm 1280x720 720p60 1991k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 28.18MiB 335 webm 1920x1080 1080p60 3201k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 49.70MiB 336 webm 2560x1440 1440p60 11166k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 170.23MiB 337 webm 3840x2160 2160p60 20122k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 335.45MiB
Those are webm however which the native Video app won't play.
We will see whether we will get support for it soon, even for the early 2016 models with the old MediaTek SoC from last year. At least Sony promised that back at CES:
Great, quite annoying. Back in time I thought 38 mb broadband must be enough for everything...
On the other hand, I'm not sure I want to double up my speed, because it will restart 18 month contract 😁
Let's say 1440p/60fps still looks amazing 🙂
@Itom86 Yeah.. 1440p is fine. And then it's only for the 60 fps YouTube video, which aren't a lot anyway.
The only issue is the compression. I am not sure YouTube uses the best algorithms, because with that bitrate the quality should be very good, instead I can get a lot of artefacts (in some cases even pixelation!) even at 2160p. I wonder if they use HEVC, and if they don't, why. That would save a load of bandwidth. At least for the UHD videos, not many watchign 1080p videos only may have HEVC supported .
As already written several times, Google's primary codec is their own VP9 which is not bad in my opinion. Not as efficient as HEVC but royalty-free...
Ok, sorry. I thought HEVC was like an extra step of compression. My bad, I'm still noobish!
So, let's say.. if an H264 file has size 100, in HEVC it should be about 50 (half of it I read). What would be the size in VP9? Actually never mind. I've found this interesting article that says HEVC is about 20% more efficient than VP9. And soon there should be a new player that should replace VP9: AV1. I wouldn't be surprised if our SoCs won't support it, though...
Yes, the Netflix codec comparison is pretty meaningful. I still prefer VP9 over HEVC due to its royalty-freeness. You just have to throw some more bits at it maybe. I am not sure whether the blockyness you witness sometimes is really due to VP9 toolbox efficiency or just some bad encoder decisions. Things like that are constantly improving.
Today's SoCs for sure don't support VP10/AV1.
@Kuschelmonschter Another thing I don't understand. You wrote long ago that VP9.2 for the HDR isn't supported by the MT5890 (while it should be by the MT5891). And that HEVC is managed by an extra chip (an ASIC?). So I have a couple of questions:
If you have the time i'd be grateful. This has been puzzling me for quite a bit, now.
Jecht_Sin schrieb:
What is actually decoding VP9/VP9.2 in our TVs
Weak CPU/GPU inside MediaTek Android TV SoCs are not capable of decoding any video format in software. Kodi for example still decodes SD MPEG-4 ASP files in SW for which real-time decoding fails already.
All modern formats are decoded by an ASIC, including H.264/AVC, H.265/HEVC, VP9 and VP9.2 on the newer MT5891, also see my Sony TV review.
If it is another chip, why does it need the GPU to support it
Video decoder ASIC is just another functional block on the SoC. The output is typically rendered via OpenGL which is where the GPU then comes into play.
Same for H264 and HEVC
Works the same for all supported codecs.
Aww... So the ASIC is stll part of the SoC, but it has nothing to do with the GPU. I thought it was an external chip. So, basically these SoCs have powerful decoders but awful CPU/GPU?
Surfing Amazon I've found this HP96 Pro+ the other day. Not that I'm interested on buying it, but it has 8 cores, 3GB RAM, and a Gigabit ethernet port (and they even give a BT keyboard with touchpad! All for 100€). Sure Sony could come out with similar specs.. Not to mention that it has been updated to Android 7.1.2!
Just out of curiosity I wonder if it plays YouTube in HDR as well.
Surfing Amazon I've found this HP96 Pro+ the other day. Not that I'm interested on buying it, but it has 8 cores, 3GB RAM, and a Gigabit ethernet port (and they even give a BT keyboard with touchpad! All for 100€). Sure Sony could come out with similar specs.. Not to mention that it has been updated to Android 7.1.2!
Be very careful with those boxes. Firmware is typically much worse than Sony's. Most of them can't even do Netflix or only up to HD. AMLogic S912 does not support VP9.2. I don't know whether any of those boxes can actually do HDR...
Aww... So the ASIC is stll part of the SoC, but it has nothing to do with the GPU. I thought it was an external chip. So, basically these SoCs have powerful decoders but awful CPU/GPU?
There is nothing fancy about the decoder either. It supports all modern formats up to 2160p60. Intel Quick Sync is something I would call fancy where you can encode and decode several video streams in parallel.
Well, I meant powerful compared to some other boxes you mentioned before. Also compared to the incredibly awful CPU/GPU couple!
@Kuschelmonschter wrote:
Be very careful with those boxes. Firmware is typically much worse than Sony's. Most of them can't even do Netflix or only up to HD. AMLogic S912 does not support VP9.2. I don't know whether any of those boxes can actually do HDR...
Out of curiosity I have checked the specs of the Amlogic S912, which being the eptacore model should be the one inside the box I posted earlier. It says it supports Dolby Vision and HDR10. It also says vp9, but nothing about vp9.2. Although I am not sure if with vp9 they include vp9.2 as well.