Grayson Dere
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Just today I received news that Netflix will soon be offering higher bitrate audio streaming for surround sound users.
https://techcrunch.com/2019/05/01/netflix-launches-high-quality-audio-for-tv-viewers/
My natural skepticism comes from this statement below that Netflix makes regarding their compression:
"...high-quality sound is not lossless, but is “perceptually transparent” — meaning that even though the audio is compressed, it’s indistinguishable from the original source, Netflix claims."
Bitrates will be up to 640 kbps for 5.1 surround and up to 768 kbps for Dolby Atmos users. I was curious to what Blu-ray offers in bitrate for Dolby TrueHD Atmos and according to the Dolby Developers website it averages a whopping 6,000 kbps!!
source: https://developer.dolby.com/blog/dolby-audio-over-hdmi-part-1-codecs/
If I misinterpreted something please correct me : )
What are your thoughts to Netflix's claim about their streaming audio being indistinguishable from the original source?
https://techcrunch.com/2019/05/01/netflix-launches-high-quality-audio-for-tv-viewers/
My natural skepticism comes from this statement below that Netflix makes regarding their compression:
"...high-quality sound is not lossless, but is “perceptually transparent” — meaning that even though the audio is compressed, it’s indistinguishable from the original source, Netflix claims."
Bitrates will be up to 640 kbps for 5.1 surround and up to 768 kbps for Dolby Atmos users. I was curious to what Blu-ray offers in bitrate for Dolby TrueHD Atmos and according to the Dolby Developers website it averages a whopping 6,000 kbps!!
source: https://developer.dolby.com/blog/dolby-audio-over-hdmi-part-1-codecs/
If I misinterpreted something please correct me : )
What are your thoughts to Netflix's claim about their streaming audio being indistinguishable from the original source?