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YouTube HDR content is finally available!
You will find a playlist here. However, these clips will be played as SDR on Sonys for now.
With youtube-dl you can find vp9.2 encodings for those clips:
330 webm 256x144 144p60 156k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 2.38MiB 331 webm 426x240 240p60 256k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 3.87MiB 332 webm 640x360 360p60 485k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 7.35MiB 333 webm 854x480 480p60 909k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 13.83MiB 334 webm 1280x720 720p60 1991k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 28.18MiB 335 webm 1920x1080 1080p60 3201k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 49.70MiB 336 webm 2560x1440 1440p60 11166k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 170.23MiB 337 webm 3840x2160 2160p60 20122k , vp9.2, 60fps, video only, 335.45MiB
Those are webm however which the native Video app won't play.
We will see whether we will get support for it soon, even for the early 2016 models with the old MediaTek SoC from last year. At least Sony promised that back at CES:
sonyfan0012 schrieb:LOL.
it's such an awesome app isn't it? The best.
Is your only goal provoking here? And you wonder why it is getting personal...
sonyfan0012 wrote:LOL.
it's such an awesome app isn't it? The best.
In my TV it still stutters much less frequently than the awful Amazon Video (which doesn't go above 30 fps) and now even Kodi. The app is fine, it's the CPU/OS couple in the television that's awful.
Tried FW 3.925 on my ATV1 based TV which claims to improve YouTube 4K...
Dunno which problem it solves, but it is not the micro-judder issue discussed in this thread. YouTube 2.0 CPU usage is still high, micro-juddering is still there for 1440p60 or 2160p60.
Same on Android 7.0. It fixes nothing. The most it's doing is that now most of the 2160p@60fps videos I checked play at 1440p@60fps. And still with frame rate drops.
Not even the volume bar has been improved!! Most useless update ever until now. After 6 months I expected a fully working OS!
he most it's doing is that now most of the 2160p@60fps videos I checked play at 1440p@60fps.
What do the nerd stats say about 'Connection Speed'?
Kuschelmonschter wrote:What do the nerd stats say about 'Connection Speed'?
It depends. from 18 to 35-40Mbps at 1440p@60fps. I tried the usual "The World in HDR" the last time and it went up to 2160p@60fps after more than a minute. Personally I don't see any improvement.
And no, HDR with vp9.2 is still not supported!! This update is a complete disappointment. Six months waiting for nothing. Apparently Sony is more interested on supporting Alexa and that useless Samba TV (which kept crashing every 10 seconds because I had it disabled) than on fixing this OS.
So, the YouTube app has been updated, it claims it improves performances, but the only differences I see are the new (white. Urgh!) icon and the new animated splash gray screen.
In terms of performances just after the update it was stuttering playing 2160p@60fps videos. Then it has got smoother, just microstuttering as usual. I am starting to wonder if the vp9 codecs aren't broken, or worse, the ASIC doesn't fully support it at max performances.
I am starting to wonder if the vp9 codecs aren't broken, or worse, the ASIC doesn't fully support it at max performances.
You can download 2160p60 VP9 webm from YouTube and play it inside Kodi. I fetched quite some samples with Opus and Vorbis audio which play perfectly smooth at much lower CPU usage compared to the YouTube app. Kodi plays them from a fast NFS share though. Bandwidth is not the problem though.
@Kuschelmonschter wrote:
I am starting to wonder if the vp9 codecs aren't broken, or worse, the ASIC doesn't fully support it at max performances.You can download 2160p60 VP9 webm from YouTube and play it inside Kodi. I fetched quite some samples with Opus and Vorbis audio which play perfectly smooth at much lower CPU usage compared to the YouTube app.
Oh yeah, I didn't think about that. I think in the past I only downloaded few HDR videos at 30fps to test the HDR. I'll give it a try.
It's true that YouTube at 2160p@60 still uses an awful lot of CPU (I get 20% idle max).