Thursday, May 10th 2018

VESA Rolls Out DisplayHDR Test Tool for HDR Display Performance Verification

The Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA ) today released a new DisplayHDR test tool that allows users to confirm the display parameters set forth in VESA's High-Performance Monitor and Display Compliance Test Specification (DisplayHDR), including brightness, color and contrast performance of high dynamic range (HDR) laptop and desktop monitors. The new DisplayHDR Test tool has a command line interface that enables professional and lab-level users to test and evaluate HDR displays at the three performance levels outlined in the DisplayHDR spec using an off-the-shelf calibration colorimeter. VESA also announced today that it has seen strong momentum in the adoption of its DisplayHDR standard, with several new certified displays being introduced this calendar quarter.

Growing Momentum of DisplayHDR Standard with Launch of First DisplayHDR 1000 Certified Display
Announced in December 2017, DisplayHDR is the display industry's first fully open standard specifying HDR quality. To date, nearly a dozen displays have been certified under the new spec across the three performance tiers (DisplayHDR 400, 600 and 1000) and released to the market. Among these is the first display to be officially certified for the DisplayHDR 1000 specification - the recently announced Philips Momentum 43-inch 4K display (436M6VBPAB). VESA anticipates many more display products to complete certification this year. Future releases of the spec are expected to reach beyond LCD to address other display technologies, including organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs), as well as higher HDR performance levels. All tiers require support of the industry standard HDR-10 format.
"As with any new technology there can be confusion out there regarding HDR specs and benefits. VESA's new DisplayHDR standard will make monitor shopping easier by offering consumers a comparable standard to judge HDR picture performance between monitors," stated Chris Brown, Philips Monitors Global Marketing Manager, TPV. "We are very excited to launch the world's first DisplayHDR 1000 monitor, the Philips Momentum 43-inch 4K Display. DisplayHDR 1000 level of picture performance will offer a more intense gaming and entertainment experience. The contrast and color really bring action scenes alive, like we've never seen before."

Transparent testing methodology without costly and cumbersome hardware
To verify HDR display performance, the DisplayHDR Test tool projects the display patterns defined in the published VESA DisplayHDR certification tests onto the screen. The user then points a self-provided colorimeter at the test patterns and uses the colorimeter's software to measure and record the display's capabilities. These results can be entered into a separate program to compute the final score and make an accurate assessment. Future versions of the test application may drive the sensor in the test tool and compute the score directly.

Chas Boyd, principal program manager with Microsoft Corp., noted that the DisplayHDR Test tool app has an important role to play, in concert with the specification, to help drive adoption of HDR technology. "HDR is still not well understood by consumers, and there exists a unique opportunity to educate and drive awareness in the market regarding the entry point for HDR," said Boyd. "Using this tool will allow those considering moving to HDR monitors to assess the quality for themselves and encourage them to make the leap."

"As a leading monitor controller manufacturer, MStar provides a broad range of chip sets that enable consumers to experience the latest immersive display technologies, such as HDR, in their end products. Working within the VESA organization, we have teamed up with key players across the display ecosystem to establish a shared, open HDR standard for the PC industry that ensures all of the key display components involved in enabling HDR work together, including the panel, GPU, backlighting and other display electronics. We are proud to be a part of this important industry-wide endeavor," stated Kevin Tseng, general manager of Monitor BU, MStar Semiconductor.

According to Vincent Chiou, associate vice president of the Display Business Unit of ASUS, "HDR promises to deliver an entirely new level of visual experience for consumers. Having co-worked closely with a clearly defined grading system like VESA's DisplayHDR standard, ASUS assures users that they are getting the display quality that they are asking for. This applies both to gamers and movie watchers who want more realism, and professional content developers who need more accuracy. Even the entry DisplayHDR performance level provides a very noticeable step-up in HDR quality for mainstream consumers, while the mid-range and high-range levels provide the serious photographer or professional artist the assurance they need when making a high-end product purchase. ASUS is leading the charge in this effort, with plans to introduce multiple products across all three performance tiers this year."

DisplayHDR Performance Parameters
The DisplayHDR specification establishes three HDR performance levels for PC displays - DisplayHDR 400 (baseline), DisplayHDR 600 (mid-range) and DisplayHDR 1000 (high-end) - using eight specific parameter requirements and associated tests. They comprise:
  • Three peak luminance tests (small spot/high luminance, brief period full-screen flash luminance, and optimized use in bright environments);
  • Two contrast measurement tests (native panel contrast and local dimming);
  • Color testing of the BT.709 and DCI-P3 color gamuts;
  • Bit-depth requirement test (stipulates minimum bit depth, confirmed via a simple visual test);
  • HDR response performance test (analyzes the speed at which the backlight can respond to changes in luminance levels, a key parameter for gaming and rapid action in movies).
  • A consumer-level version of the DisplayHDR Test tool will be available later this year, featuring a more consumer-accessible graphical user interface. The next release will also include a list of available colorimeters that meet the spec's requirements for accuracy and tolerance.
More information on the DisplayHDR specification and DisplayHDR Test tool, as well as a link to download the DisplayHDR Test tool, is available at www.displayhdr.org.
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8 Comments on VESA Rolls Out DisplayHDR Test Tool for HDR Display Performance Verification

#1
Ferrum Master
Pretty good and basic thing.

At least you see the goodness of 10bit screen if you even don't have HDR.
Posted on Reply
#2
coonbro
thing is whos running the show ? could come off as another racket as well . maybe the board members of the top 3 display manufactures ? maybe you got a vesa cirt. display at 180$ that one just as good or maybe better is not for 100$ [maybe even all the same parts used rolling off the same line of the back alley china factory ?? ]

then what real guarantee you did get something cause it had a vesa cirt sticker on it ? I have to take a lot of this stuff with a grain of salt ... in the end it either works as expected and your satisfied or it don't [ that vesa sticker aint helping you then ] then still ther was a report on blackmarket items like cables that's promoted that vesa compliance and all , so .......

Criticisms
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_Electronics_Standards_Association
Posted on Reply
#3
windwhirl
"...self-provided colorimeter..."

Not a really cumbersome device, although it is not exactly cheap. Then again, if you're shopping for a 4K HDR display, a colorimeter isn't really that out of reach...

Other than that, it's nice that VESA provides a way to test for ourselves if any display actually can show true HDR content or not.
Posted on Reply
#4
coonbro
windwhirl"...self-provided colorimeter..."

Not a really cumbersome device, although it is not exactly cheap. Then again, if you're shopping for a 4K HDR display, a colorimeter isn't really that out of reach...

Other than that, it's nice that VESA provides a way to test for ourselves if any display actually can show true HDR content or not.
maybe but if there tool how can you be sure there no bias programmed in to the software or detect a code / not a member / failed ? seems Microsoft is involved so ?

kinda like a game bench mark , fun to play with but I'd never buy the game
Posted on Reply
#5
windwhirl
coonbromaybe but if there tool how can you be sure there no bias programmed in to the software or detect a code / not a member / failed ? seems Microsoft is involved so ?

kinda like a game bench mark , fun to play with but I'd never buy the game
Colorimeters are professional tools for color measurement and calibration. They are used by designers, photographers, and many others in visual-related businesses and even in scientific research to ensure that the colors they see are exactly those and nothing else, so they are relatively trustworthy, as long as they're not very old or too cheap. Also, most known display makers don't really build colorimeters, so it's harder for them to interfere. And none of them would like to see HDR display sales plummeting because someone is tricking people into buying cheaper monitors under the belief that they are HDR ready.
Posted on Reply
#6
DeathtoGnomes
I went to download this and it took me to m$ store, they dont let you download to your normal download folder, and you get to blindly install this. No thanks Ill wait for other download sources.
Posted on Reply
#7
coonbro
DeathtoGnomesI went to download this and it took me to m$ store, they dont let you download to your normal download folder, and you get to blindly install this. No thanks Ill wait for other download sources.
TA, DA !
Posted on Reply
#8
Athlonite
DeathtoGnomesI went to download this and it took me to m$ store, they dont let you download to your normal download folder, and you get to blindly install this. No thanks Ill wait for other download sources.
Yes same here considering for months now I've not been able to install anything from the Windows app store at all I keep getting an 0x8000075 error for no apparent reason other than random FU
Posted on Reply
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