Giallo Corsa
Member
'Evening boys and gals.
So, apparently, Lytmi is about to release the 1st HDMI 2.1 capable sync-box on the market, something which not even Philips itself has done so far.
Now, the whole ambilight thing is not something new since Philips has been using this on their TV's for well over a decade the catch being, you either have to buy one of their TV's (obviously), or, get a Hue bridge + sync-box+RGB lamps/Led strips which can cost up to 450+ Eurodollars after all it's been said and done (on Selected Samsung Tvs and PC you can do without the sync-box though since the connection is.made through software).
Now, i can already see the incoming "LOL RGB GaEmer lights LOL" but...it's not that, ambilight (and the equivalent systems) are very specific compared to the usual and gaudy RGB lighting you see featured in every Youtuber's "content", basically, the lighting serves 2 purposes, 1st is to reduce eye strain acting as bias lighting and 2nd, it "expands" the content on the screen and thus giving greater immersion (if that's your thing), i.e, it's not just some random RGB lighting playing in the background.
Here's a couple of good examples :
On Philips native Ambilight, the response is immediate compared to other options on the market - the other options being the various Govee kits (T1 & T2) which, while being a good alternative (the T1 goes for 60 Eurodollars right now), unfortunately, they rely on a camera for the ambilight effect to kick in, meaning, even the newer T2 has noticeable lag with the color transitioning, also, it's a pain to set-up, plus, the color representation/transitioning is always "off" with dark parts of the screen translating as either deep red or blue (or even white).
Again, it's a good and cheaper alternative but the camera which the system relies on is just no bueno.
Taking a look at various YouTube comparisons, the Lytmi sync-box always was a good and better alternative than the Govee one (better/more responsive picture sync, better color representation etc), but, like most sync-boxes out there was restricted in being HDMI 2.0 (4K@60 Max).
The new Lytmi is HDMI 2.1 meaning, it will play well with consoles set at 120Hz , plus, it has 4 HDMI 2.1 ports to connect more than 1 console /video devices to it (big+ IMO especially for those that have TVs with only 2 HDMI 2.1 ports acting as an HDMI 2.1 switch).
The catch is...it costs about 200 Eurodollars which while steep, it's still half the price of a Philips ambilight/Hue set-up and it's "just" 40-50 bucks/euros more than the Govee T2 envision kit (always depending on where you live).
I know that there's a myriad of unknown quality Chinese sync-boxes on AliExpress etc but, they're restricted to 4K@60 and - again - they're of unknown quality (like most of the PRC shit on Amazon and AliExpress).
I also know that you can create an Ambilight kit on the cheap using a Raspberry pi, but, you have to be somewhat technically inclined to set the whole thing up.
Mind you, this new sync-box from Lytmi isn't officially out yet so if anyone's interested, you might as well wait a couple.of weeks/months until the usual kinks get sorted out (being V1 and all that jazz).
Here's a (most probably paid) preview :
TLDNR : Good /cheaper TV Ambilight alternative that doesn't rely on a camera with full HDMI 2.1 support (8k@60, 4K@120Hz)
Cheers
EDIT : these won't do VRR
So, apparently, Lytmi is about to release the 1st HDMI 2.1 capable sync-box on the market, something which not even Philips itself has done so far.
Now, the whole ambilight thing is not something new since Philips has been using this on their TV's for well over a decade the catch being, you either have to buy one of their TV's (obviously), or, get a Hue bridge + sync-box+RGB lamps/Led strips which can cost up to 450+ Eurodollars after all it's been said and done (on Selected Samsung Tvs and PC you can do without the sync-box though since the connection is.made through software).
Now, i can already see the incoming "LOL RGB GaEmer lights LOL" but...it's not that, ambilight (and the equivalent systems) are very specific compared to the usual and gaudy RGB lighting you see featured in every Youtuber's "content", basically, the lighting serves 2 purposes, 1st is to reduce eye strain acting as bias lighting and 2nd, it "expands" the content on the screen and thus giving greater immersion (if that's your thing), i.e, it's not just some random RGB lighting playing in the background.
Here's a couple of good examples :
On Philips native Ambilight, the response is immediate compared to other options on the market - the other options being the various Govee kits (T1 & T2) which, while being a good alternative (the T1 goes for 60 Eurodollars right now), unfortunately, they rely on a camera for the ambilight effect to kick in, meaning, even the newer T2 has noticeable lag with the color transitioning, also, it's a pain to set-up, plus, the color representation/transitioning is always "off" with dark parts of the screen translating as either deep red or blue (or even white).
Again, it's a good and cheaper alternative but the camera which the system relies on is just no bueno.
Taking a look at various YouTube comparisons, the Lytmi sync-box always was a good and better alternative than the Govee one (better/more responsive picture sync, better color representation etc), but, like most sync-boxes out there was restricted in being HDMI 2.0 (4K@60 Max).
The new Lytmi is HDMI 2.1 meaning, it will play well with consoles set at 120Hz , plus, it has 4 HDMI 2.1 ports to connect more than 1 console /video devices to it (big+ IMO especially for those that have TVs with only 2 HDMI 2.1 ports acting as an HDMI 2.1 switch).
The catch is...it costs about 200 Eurodollars which while steep, it's still half the price of a Philips ambilight/Hue set-up and it's "just" 40-50 bucks/euros more than the Govee T2 envision kit (always depending on where you live).
I know that there's a myriad of unknown quality Chinese sync-boxes on AliExpress etc but, they're restricted to 4K@60 and - again - they're of unknown quality (like most of the PRC shit on Amazon and AliExpress).
I also know that you can create an Ambilight kit on the cheap using a Raspberry pi, but, you have to be somewhat technically inclined to set the whole thing up.
Mind you, this new sync-box from Lytmi isn't officially out yet so if anyone's interested, you might as well wait a couple.of weeks/months until the usual kinks get sorted out (being V1 and all that jazz).
Here's a (most probably paid) preview :
TLDNR : Good /cheaper TV Ambilight alternative that doesn't rely on a camera with full HDMI 2.1 support (8k@60, 4K@120Hz)
Cheers
EDIT : these won't do VRR
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