10-bit (Necessary for true HDR10 or Dolby Vision playback).
Below is the article.
Stranger Things Season 2 in 4K HDR: The Ultimate Viewing Experience Stranger.Things.S02.2160p.BluRay.x265.10bit.HDR...
He paused the frame. The outline didn’t pause. It turned its head.
He opened it again. This time, the Upside Down wasn't a parallel dimension on screen. It was the background . The entire 10-bit gradient had been replaced with a slow, crawling bioluminescence—veins of purple and rot-green. And the characters? They weren’t acting. Dustin was staring directly into the camera, mouthing words that weren't in the script. 10-bit (Necessary for true HDR10 or Dolby Vision playback)
: For digital archival, a "Remux" (an untouched copy of the disc data) usually ranges from 50GB to 90GB per file to maintain maximum bitrate. Collector's Value
He ran it through a sandbox player. The opening synth of "Should I Stay or Should I Go" crackled, but not with the warm nostalgia of the 80s. It crackled with something else. Interference. Like radio static from a storm that hadn't happened yet. The outline didn’t pause
x265 is significantly more efficient than the older x264 standard. It allows for massive amounts of visual data to be stored in a smaller file size.
10-bit (Necessary for true HDR10 or Dolby Vision playback).
Below is the article.
Stranger Things Season 2 in 4K HDR: The Ultimate Viewing Experience
He paused the frame. The outline didn’t pause. It turned its head.
He opened it again. This time, the Upside Down wasn't a parallel dimension on screen. It was the background . The entire 10-bit gradient had been replaced with a slow, crawling bioluminescence—veins of purple and rot-green. And the characters? They weren’t acting. Dustin was staring directly into the camera, mouthing words that weren't in the script.
: For digital archival, a "Remux" (an untouched copy of the disc data) usually ranges from 50GB to 90GB per file to maintain maximum bitrate. Collector's Value
He ran it through a sandbox player. The opening synth of "Should I Stay or Should I Go" crackled, but not with the warm nostalgia of the 80s. It crackled with something else. Interference. Like radio static from a storm that hadn't happened yet.
x265 is significantly more efficient than the older x264 standard. It allows for massive amounts of visual data to be stored in a smaller file size.