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HDMI Spec Upgraded To Support 'Deep Color'

writertype writes "If you own a digital television, there's a good chance it supports HDMI as an A/V interface. Well, for all you early adopters who bought an HDMI-less TV and regretted it later, the HDMI spec has been upgraded yet again, to version 1.3. Features include "deep color", or color depths beyond what the human eye can perceive, eight-channel audio support, among others. Interesting note: the PlayStation 3 supports deep color, according to the HDMI chief."

4 of 142 comments (clear)

  1. Licenced colors by Volante3192 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Unfortunatly, due to unforseen copyright issues, all colors between Deep Green and Deep Violent will be subjected to a licencing fee.

    IBM was unreachable for comment.

  2. Re:Huh? by statemachine · · Score: 5, Informative

    I figured someone would be confused by this. However, the article expains:
    "The color bit depth [of today's displays] is typically 24-bits RGB - that gets you 16 million colors, and the human eye can distinguish that," Chard said. "That leads to scaling and onscreen effects which you can pick up. Either 36-bit or 48-bit RGB is beyond the ability of the human eye to distinguish."

    Right now your eye can see the color transitions. The point is to make it so you can't see the transitions.

  3. Re:Huh? by pthisis · · Score: 5, Informative

    With current color depths, you can distinguish the difference between adjacent colors (in some limited portions of the field). By taking it to a depth where differences are imperceptible, you make things look smoother.

    Essentially you want to have your colors go as deep as you need to to make differences imperceptible, which this (supposedly) does. After that going even deeper would be a waste.

    --
    rage, rage against the dying of the light
  4. Re:Bad video games. Bad! by B1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    In fact many parents don't even let their children play violet video games, for fear that the games might adversely affect their children's minds.