Dolby Vision or HDR10+? Dolby wants you to have both

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The term ‘format war’ can be exciting to use – it denotes some sort of competition between some of the leading tech companies in the world. But it can also carry some … expectations with it, too. 

When reporters have covered HDR10+ and compared it against the existing dynamic metadata-rich HDR format, Dolby Vision, it’s always been as a competition – that one format will win and one will lose. 

And yet, according to Dolby Laboratories’ Senior Vice President of Consumer Entertainment, Giles Baker, it doesn’t necessarily have to be that way.

In an interview with TechRadar, Baker mused about a future in which both systems coexist. Granted, he believes Dolby provides a better end-to-end solution for HDR mastering and delivery, but that doesn’t mean he thinks HDR10+ doesn’t have its merits. It’s just … different.

The conversation started after we reported that Sony US President and COO, Mike Fasulo, claimed that he sees Sony focusing on Dolby Vision for now, potentially never adopting the HDR10+ standard

While Dolby Labs seems to be happy with that response, Baker doesn’t want bad blood and – more importantly, misinformation – spreading about what HDR10+ is, and just how it’s different from Dolby Vision. 

Dolby Vision and HDR10+: the pros and the cons 

As you might have read elsewhere on the site, Dolby Vision and HDR10+ are the next step in the evolution in high dynamic range (HDR) – a video display technology that uses metadata to drastically increase brightness, color saturation and contrast.

HDR, the universal standard set by the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), is governed by something called static metadata – i.e. data that doesn’t change from scene-to-scene. It’s a set range that color, brightness and contrast need to stay within for the entirety of the movie or TV show. 

What Dolby Vision and HDR10+ both do is use dynamic metadata to change those attributes on a moment-to-moment basis. This means that scenes can be more dynamic with one scene reaching peak black levels of the TV, with the next doing the same for brightness. 

The difference between them, and the point Baker wants to make abundantly clear, is that, for Dolby Vision, all of that metadata is created by hand by colorists and editors at the movie studio. HDR10+’s metadata, meanwhile, is produced by an upscaling algorithm. This algorithm-based easy mode for content generation takes a lot of work off the editors and reduces time in development, which, Baker admitted, is a good thing. 

Meet the Panasonic DP-UB820, the first UHD Blu-ray player to support both Dolby Vision and HDR10+. 

“But HDR10+ and Dolby Vision can coexist,” Baker says, pointing to Panasonic’s recent announcement of the first HDR10+ Blu-ray player to simultaneously support Dolby Vision, the Panasonic UB820. “We don’t see any reason that discs [and players] can’t have both.”

The sentiment is a nice one: There doesn’t need to be a winner and a loser here – we should all just enjoy better-looking content in whichever format directors and creators choose to use. 

Is it possible that five years from now we’ll all own discs with both Dolby Vision and HDR10+ and players and TVs capable of displaying both formats? It’s certainly possible.

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