Re: Link to article on HDR displays
Re: Link to article on HDR displays
Early sales of HDR displays were in the $40,000 range. With Dolby's
investment, one would hope that they would now sell below $10,000.
The compelling sales are in medicine, where consultants can analyze
HD radiographs on these displays with similar detail to that found in
film. HDR cameras are still in the $65,000 price range. Simple HDR
through bracketed exposure and reassembly is supported in Photoshop CS3.
The technology is very trick and worth watching (pun intended). The
images converted to HDR and displayed compare to looking at an 8x10
transparency camera original (scaled to widescreen).
The brightness ratio almost requires sunglasses, when viewed in a
dark room. The impression given is like that of being in direct
sunlight. . . and it is almost too much for the dilated pupil to manage.
- Jon
GrafixGear
8 West Glen Avenue
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
(201) 447-1510
email@hidden
http://www.GrafixGear.Com
On Aug 6, 2007, at 9:09 AM, mbs wrote:
Anyone know more about the type of display described here, and it's
suitability to still image work?
http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/19141/page1/
Regards,
--
Marc Sitkin
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