HDMI 2.1: What’s New, and Do You Need to Upgrade?
Tim Brookes - September 12, 2020
Tim Brookes - September 12, 2020
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With Для просмотра ссылки Войдиили Зарегистрируйся arriving by the end of 2020 and Для просмотра ссылки Войди или Зарегистрируйся of graphics cards cresting the horizon, HDMI 2.1 is looking more critical than ever. Does this mean you have to upgrade your TV to take advantage of the new features?
Higher Bandwidth, More Pixels
HDMI Licensing Authority
Most displays on the market currently support the HDMI 2.0 standard, which has a bandwidth cap of 18 Gbits per second. That’s enough to carry an uncompressed Для просмотра ссылки Войдиили Зарегистрируйся signal at 60 frames per second at up to eight-bit color. This is adequate for the vast majority of uses, including watching UHD Blu-rays or playing games on an Xbox One X.
HDMI 2.1 is the next step forward for the standard, adding support for an uncompressed Для просмотра ссылки Войдиили Зарегистрируйся signal at 60 frames per second in 12-bit color. It achieves this with a bandwidth throughput of 48 Gbits per second. Using display stream compression (DSC), HDMI 2.1 can push a 10K signal at 120 frames per second in 12 bit.
Some implementations of HDMI 2.1 use ports that only reach around 40 Gbits per second. This is enough to handle a 4K signal at 120 frames per second in 10-bit color, which is also enough to take full advantage of the 10-bit panels on consumer-grade TVs.
High-end PC gamers tempted by NVIDIA’s new 30 series cards will be pleased to learn that the company has Для просмотра ссылки Войдиили Зарегистрируйся moving forward. This means it won’t matter if your TV lacks the full 48 Gbits per second specification.
HDMI Licensing Administrator
Currently, HDMI 2.1 is aimed mostly at gamers hopping on the next-generation console or graphics card train. Both the Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5 will support 4K resolution at 120 frames per second. This will require that the HDMI 2.1 standard be implemented.
If your TV doesn’t support HDMI 2.1, you’ll have to make do with a 4K signal running at only(!) 60 frames per second. The majority of titles for the last console generation ran at 30 frames per second, so it remains to be seen how much of a deal-breaker this will be.
HDMI 2.1 is so new, NVIDIA has only three new 30 series cards in the pipeline that support the standard. Their previous RTX 2000 and GTX 1000 series cards aren’t HDMI 2.1 compatible. Many TV manufacturers, including Sony, have yet to include HDMI 2.1 in their top-tier displays.
We expect the HDMI 2.1 standard to really take off in 2021. However, it will be a few years before we see widespread adoption in budget displays.
Support for Dynamic HDR
With so much bandwidth available, there’s more room in the pipes for raw data, too. HDR stands for High Dynamic Range, and it enables a broader range of colors in content like movies and games. Для просмотра ссылки Войдиили Зарегистрируйся, only support static metadata. However, Для просмотра ссылки Войди или Зарегистрируйся and Dolby Vision formats allow for dynamic metadata on a per-scene or -frame basis.
Dynamic HDR provides a TV with more information about what to do with the signal it’s receiving. Rather than reading a single set of instructions for an entire movie, dynamic metadata gives the TV constant updates about how to tweak the image on-screen so it looks its best.
HDMI Licensing Administrator
While every HDR-capable TV supports HDR10 with its static metadata, dynamic HDR is another beast altogether. The most widely supported format is Dolby Vision. It’s favored by hardware manufacturers including LG, Sony, Panasonic, and Philips. Samsung is going all-in on the less prevalent HDR10+, which also happens to be an open format (Dolby Vision, as its name suggests, is proprietary).
It’s important to note that you don’t need an HDMI 2.1 device to display HDR10+ and Dolby Vision—at least not at current 4K resolutions. If your TV supports it, it will stream Dolby Vision content from Netflix just fine.
Moving forward, though, the HDMI 2.1 standard ensures plenty of bandwidth will be available for both metadata and high-resolution signals at high frame rates.
We don’t yet know how the PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X will implement HDR, but they’ll likely be the main proving ground for dynamic HDR over HDMI over the next few years.
Variable Refresh Rate (VRR)
A TV’s refresh rate is how many times the panel refreshes per second. This is measured in hertz, and it’s closely tied to the frame rate. When the two are out of sync, you get an effect called “screen tearing.” It’s caused by the display trying to show more than one frame simultaneously when the console or PC isn’t ready.
If you adjust the refresh rate of the display to match the frame rate of your console or PC, you can effectively eliminate screen tearing with no performance penalties. Companies like NVIDIA and AMD have their own methods of dealing with screen tearing, known as Для просмотра ссылки Войдиили Зарегистрируйся, respectively.
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With Для просмотра ссылки Войди
Higher Bandwidth, More Pixels
HDMI Licensing Authority
Most displays on the market currently support the HDMI 2.0 standard, which has a bandwidth cap of 18 Gbits per second. That’s enough to carry an uncompressed Для просмотра ссылки Войди
HDMI 2.1 is the next step forward for the standard, adding support for an uncompressed Для просмотра ссылки Войди
Some implementations of HDMI 2.1 use ports that only reach around 40 Gbits per second. This is enough to handle a 4K signal at 120 frames per second in 10-bit color, which is also enough to take full advantage of the 10-bit panels on consumer-grade TVs.
High-end PC gamers tempted by NVIDIA’s new 30 series cards will be pleased to learn that the company has Для просмотра ссылки Войди
HDMI Licensing Administrator
Currently, HDMI 2.1 is aimed mostly at gamers hopping on the next-generation console or graphics card train. Both the Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5 will support 4K resolution at 120 frames per second. This will require that the HDMI 2.1 standard be implemented.
If your TV doesn’t support HDMI 2.1, you’ll have to make do with a 4K signal running at only(!) 60 frames per second. The majority of titles for the last console generation ran at 30 frames per second, so it remains to be seen how much of a deal-breaker this will be.
HDMI 2.1 is so new, NVIDIA has only three new 30 series cards in the pipeline that support the standard. Their previous RTX 2000 and GTX 1000 series cards aren’t HDMI 2.1 compatible. Many TV manufacturers, including Sony, have yet to include HDMI 2.1 in their top-tier displays.
We expect the HDMI 2.1 standard to really take off in 2021. However, it will be a few years before we see widespread adoption in budget displays.
Support for Dynamic HDR
With so much bandwidth available, there’s more room in the pipes for raw data, too. HDR stands for High Dynamic Range, and it enables a broader range of colors in content like movies and games. Для просмотра ссылки Войди
Dynamic HDR provides a TV with more information about what to do with the signal it’s receiving. Rather than reading a single set of instructions for an entire movie, dynamic metadata gives the TV constant updates about how to tweak the image on-screen so it looks its best.
HDMI Licensing Administrator
While every HDR-capable TV supports HDR10 with its static metadata, dynamic HDR is another beast altogether. The most widely supported format is Dolby Vision. It’s favored by hardware manufacturers including LG, Sony, Panasonic, and Philips. Samsung is going all-in on the less prevalent HDR10+, which also happens to be an open format (Dolby Vision, as its name suggests, is proprietary).
It’s important to note that you don’t need an HDMI 2.1 device to display HDR10+ and Dolby Vision—at least not at current 4K resolutions. If your TV supports it, it will stream Dolby Vision content from Netflix just fine.
Moving forward, though, the HDMI 2.1 standard ensures plenty of bandwidth will be available for both metadata and high-resolution signals at high frame rates.
We don’t yet know how the PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X will implement HDR, but they’ll likely be the main proving ground for dynamic HDR over HDMI over the next few years.
Variable Refresh Rate (VRR)
A TV’s refresh rate is how many times the panel refreshes per second. This is measured in hertz, and it’s closely tied to the frame rate. When the two are out of sync, you get an effect called “screen tearing.” It’s caused by the display trying to show more than one frame simultaneously when the console or PC isn’t ready.
If you adjust the refresh rate of the display to match the frame rate of your console or PC, you can effectively eliminate screen tearing with no performance penalties. Companies like NVIDIA and AMD have their own methods of dealing with screen tearing, known as Для просмотра ссылки Войди
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