Are you 100% certain of this? So there is no benefit of going HDR10 than HDR1000 (Dolby)?
Anyone been able to get a particial refund on the new price for the KS8000 65" or 60" with samsung?
My credit card (Discover) told me they would, but I had to call back tomorrow when that department is open.
Then I called Samsung to ask if they would do it (instead of Discover doing it) and while I was discussing with them, I decided that since the price is almost identical for the 65" for what I paid for the 60", ($26.50 difference) I'd rather just purchase the 65" and refuse delivery for the 60".
For what it's worth, the Samsung reps weren't fully knowledgeable on it, but they also didn't seem like it was out of the question to just refund the difference. I believe it was the "weekend crew" answering phones that don't normally know as much as the full-time weekday employees.
Only word of caution is they Discover pays for the service through a third party company. They explicitly say they don't match employee pricing discounts in the terms. But if you have success, please report back because then I'll do the same match for the one I bought at Best Buy.
It seems $1179 for the 60" seems the norm now. I'm hoping we see it drop more on/after Black Friday. I'd like to get closer to that $850 price but the wife and I just decided it's not with the Samsung headache to order another and return this one to Best Buy.
At this point I no longer need the price matching as I decided to just go with the 65 instead.
How much is the KS8000 49' with this EPP thing?
Also is that still working or is it dead?
Thanks
Only 1 port is 60hz 4K, the rest are HDMI 1.4Thoughts on the Vizio m70 d3? I'm shopping at Costco and am tempted.
Only 1 port is 60hz 4K, the rest are HDMI 1.4
Congrats on the free upgrade
It's an excellent TV, I've been blown away by 4K Netflix and gaming. Maybe I'll attempt a price match on the employee price with Discover, worst that can happen is they reject it.
Not sure, every piece of tech does handshakes differently.That shouldn't matter if I'm running everything through a receiver, right?
How much is the KS8000 49' with this EPP thing?
Also is that still working or is it dead?
Thanks
Yep its working I ordered the TV about 40 minutes ago..but NO confirmation email and NOTHING shows up in order history, but chatted with discover card and the pending transaction is there, so they had no problem charging me LOL not sure what is going on really glad I wrote down the order number otherwise I would have ZERO proof
That's the other way round. Dolby vision support includes HDR10. A TV with just HDR10 won't support Dolby vision.
TBH I'm not sure it matters at the moment - the LG OLEDs with Dolby vision don't go very bright anyway (even worse with the backlight limiting) so the even brighter requirements of Dolby will probably be wasted. Not sure what benefits the dynamic metadata might bring
Anyone been able to get a particial refund on the new price for the KS8000 65" or 60" with samsung?
Really long shot here.
Any more invites for this EPP savings.
Could someone inform me on this EPP thing and how much a 49" ks8000 would cost?
I just heard about this and really want this tv
I don't get the comments on OLED brightness, I own a C6 and with HDR content it can get bright enough to make me squint during some scenes.
for the 49 inch it will be 674 plus whatever tax you have in your state
I ordered the 65" for $1279 on the 8th but just saw the lower price. I called Samsung today to get the price difference refund. The rep had me email her a picture of the price listed on their website and she said i'll get the refund within 3-5 days. I'm ecstatic to get this high end tv under $1100.![]()
I ordered the 65" for $1279 on the 8th but just saw the lower price. I called Samsung today to get the price difference refund. The rep had me email her a picture of the price listed on their website and she said i'll get the refund within 3-5 days. I'm ecstatic to get this high end tv under $1100.![]()
That's the other way round. Dolby vision support includes HDR10. A TV with just HDR10 won't support Dolby vision.
TBH I'm not sure it matters at the moment - the LG OLEDs with Dolby vision don't go very bright anyway (even worse with the backlight limiting) so the even brighter requirements of Dolby will probably be wasted. Not sure what benefits the dynamic metadata might bring
I know what you mean, but for some reason OLED only has to get to 500nits for HDR when LCD has to get to 1000. And I think Dolby vision can to go 4000? It does just seem too bright
I know what you mean, but for some reason OLED only has to get to 500nits for HDR when LCD has to get to 1000. And I think Dolby vision can to go 4000? It does just seem too bright
Same story. Really happy with their customer service even though their shipping company is atrocious.
It's because an OLED can get far blacker than the best LED. Because of that, OLEDs don't need the same level of peak brightness as an LED to boast a similar contrast ratio for High Dynamic Range.I know what you mean, but for some reason OLED only has to get to 500nits for HDR when LCD has to get to 1000. And I think Dolby vision can to go 4000? It does just seem too bright
Devices
The UHD Alliance supports various display technologies and consequently, have defined combinations of parameters to ensure a premium experience across a wide range of devices. In order to receive the UHD Alliance Premium Logo, the device must meet or exceed the following specifications:
• Image Resolution: 3840×2160
• Color Bit Depth: 10-bit signal
• Color Palette (Wide Color Gamut)
• Signal Input: BT.2020 color representation
• Display Reproduction: More than 90% of P3 colors
• High Dynamic Range
• SMPTE ST2084 EOTF
• A combination of peak brightness and black level either:
• More than 1000 nits peak brightness and less than 0.05 nits black level
OR
• More than 540 nits peak brightness and less than 0.0005 nits black level
- http://www.uhdalliance.org/uhd-alliance-press-releasejanuary-4-2016
A TV display is an additive color system—red, green, blue—meaning that the brightest pixel is white. The
problem with restricting maximum brightness to 100 nits (as in TV and Blu-ray) is that the brighter the
color, the closer it becomes to white, so the color quickly becomes less saturated. For instance, the
brightest blue on a restricted-brightness display is a mere 7 nits, so a blue sky will never be as bright as it
should be. With the maximum Dolby Vision brightness of 4,000 nits using today’s monitor capabilities and
up to 10,000 nits in the future, a content creator has the range to represent a sky that is truly bright and
saturated, making it seem more natural.
I know what you mean, but for some reason OLED only has to get to 500nits for HDR when LCD has to get to 1000. And I think Dolby vision can to go 4000? It does just seem too bright
If someone could do a screengrab of the new price for the 65 inch that would be amazing. Gonna try and get Samsung to adjust my price.
So a Samsung using Dolby Vision won't work with the PS4 Pro where HDR is concerned?
the PS4 Pro would output to the TV but HDR would not work
Thanks guys, but can someone confirm with a source (link) where it actually states that HDR1000 (dolby) INCLUDES HDR10? Because here http://community.us.playstation.com...R-10-vs-Dolby-Vision-for-PS4-Pro/m-p/46040671
some guy asks:
And the other guy answers:
So in this case, a HDR1000 TV doesn't support regular PS4 Pro HDR (HDR10)... is this just incorrect information?
Unlike some of the consumer technology face-offs of the past, picking sides isnt quite so straightforward when it comes to Dolby Vision vs HDR 10. This is because while Dolby Vision requires everything - from the content, to the player, to the screen - to all support Dolby Vision; such players and televisions will still be able to play HDR 10 content as well, which in theory gives you the best of both worlds.
I'll see if I can find something. But I'm pretty sure Samsung don't even support Dolby vision so that information is already incorrect. AFAIK all HDR TVs support HDR10, and LG also supports Dolby vision
Edit: http://www.expertreviews.co.uk/tvs-entertainment/1404660/dolby-vision-vs-hdr-10-whats-the-difference
Thanks a lot! One last question, (sec, let me edit)
Thanks a lot! One last question, so between this:
http://www.lg.com/uk/tvs/lg-60UH770V
and this:
http://www.lg.com/se/tv/lg-65UH615V
Same price, which one would you go for? The 65" doesn't have HDR1000 right? While the 60" has HDR1000.