• Super Bowl LVII will screen in 4K and Dolby Vision, but there's a

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Thu Feb 2 13:45:03 2023
    Super Bowl LVII will screen in 4K and Dolby Vision, but there's a catch

    Date:
    Thu, 02 Feb 2023 13:31:08 +0000

    Description:
    Dolby Vision HDR has come to TV sports, but limited distribution means experiencing it won't be easy.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    Super Bowl LVII takes place on Sunday, February 12, when football fans will get to see the mighty Kansas City Chiefs take on the equally formidable Philadelphia Eagles. It promises to be a hair-raising match, one that over
    100 million-plus viewers in the US will tune into on TV screens big and
    small.

    The good news this year for owners of the best 4K TVs is that the game will
    be transmitted in 4K with Dolby Vision high dynamic range. Think of how incredible that will look every detail, from the mesh of the players' uniforms to the light reflected off their helmets should come through with vivid, startling clarity. But there's a catch: only subscribers to Comcast's Xfinity X1 cable service will be able to watch the game in the Dolby Vision HDR format.

    According to Dolby, Comcast cable customers will need a compatible X1 cable box and, of course, a compatible TV to experience the Dolby Vision HDR goodness when watching Super Bowl LVII.

    Those who dont subscribe to Comcast cable wont be completely shut out of experiencing the game in 4K and HDR, however. Apps like YouTube TV and fuboTV let you stream sports events normally seen via broadcast TV and cable. Many viewers will be watching the game that way on February 12, and Fox Sports, which has broadcast rights to Super Bowl LVII, will also be making the game available in 4K on its Fox Sports app just not with Dolby Vision. Instead, basic HDR10 high dynamic range will be used, a format thats supported by virtually all 4K TVs, Dolby Vision-compatible ones included.

    But wait theres another catch. While the idea of 4K football, with Dolby Vision no less, is thrilling, what Fox Sports will actually be transmitting
    on February 12 is upconverted regular high-def video. The reason for this is that major sports events like the Super Bowl require a large number of
    cameras to capture the action from every possible angle drones included and 1080p is a more manageable production format than 4K. Fox Sports had already transmitted this years NFL playoffs games in upconverted 4K, and it did the same back in 2020, which was the last time the network broadcast the Super Bowl. Analysis: More sports should be broadcast in 4K and HDR

    Super Bowl LVII getting the Dolby Vision treatment is an interesting development, and one thats been a long time coming. With TVs generally
    getting bigger and brighter, and packed with extras such as Dolby Vision HDR, sports fans should expect premium events such as the Super Bowl to be transmitted in the highest possible quality. Even low-cost TVs now support Dolby Vision, and everyone who owns a compatible TV will undoubtedly want to take advantage of this picture quality-boosting feature.

    Having the Super Bowls Dolby Vision debut limited to a single cable TV
    service seems odd, however. Viewers have been cutting the cord in droves over the past decade as the best streaming services have stepped up to provide a viable alternative to subscription-based cable TV bundles. I gave mine up years ago and never looked back. But Super Bowl LVII in Dolby Vision is something I would want to see, and Im now experiencing a pang of regret that
    I wont be able to watch the game in the premium HDR format.

    While movies and TVs shows in actual 4K not upconverted are easy to come by on streaming services, sports transmitted in 4K have been slow to arrive. The FIFA World Cup was presented in 4K and HDR back in 2022, but it could only be streamed via the BBC iPlayer app. (Fox Sports in the US showed the same, but again upconverted from 1080p.)

    While cable TV providers and streaming services make their slow creep toward presenting sports in 4K and HDR, digital TV broadcasters in the US are
    proving even more sluggish. The next-gen ATSC 3.0 digital TV standard in the US supports 4K and HDR broadcasting, along with immersive Dolby Atmos audio, but we have yet to see TV stations that have made the transition from the older, HD-only ATSC 1.0 broadcast format take advantage of those
    capabilities. In fact, the situation has gotten so bad that the National Association of Broadcasters has called the ATSC 3.0 transition stalled and asked the FCC to create a taskforce to speed up the process.

    Ultra high-definition 4K with HDR is the future of sports broadcasting our TVs have long supported both, and many streaming services readily provide
    both for plenty of programming other than sports. Getting to see games in those formats would be a welcome advancement, and while youre at it broadcasters, please add Dolby Atmos audio to the mix.



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/news/super-bowl-lvii-will-screen-in-4k-and-dolby-vis ion-but-theres-a-catch


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