• @[email protected]
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    221 year ago

    Once a picture is taken and compressed into a jpeg (or whatever) why is there a need for any extra support beyond “sending an image”?

    • @[email protected]
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      101 year ago

      Ultra HDR is a new image format available with Android 14 on supported devices & camera. Basically it’s a JPEG image but some additional data added to it when captured on supported devices. With ultra HDR, images can have darker shadows and brighter highlights.

      I thought the same thing at first, but it sounds like it is just that you can now view the “Ultra HDR”-ness within the app.

      Also,

      Google Messages doesn’t strip the gain map metadata from images

      • Die4Ever
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        1 year ago

        Yeah I guess it probably strips unknown data segments from the file for security and privacy, and it would have a whitelist of segment types it will keep

        And of course the ability to display them with ultra HDR

    • @FutileRecipe
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      41 year ago

      Well, it does spell out the difference of Ultra HDR. However, you asked “need?” There is absolutely no need (in my opinion) of better pictures, but I also rarely take or view them so I might not be the best judge.

    • @UsernameIsTooLon
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      1 year ago

      Obviously it’s not exactly a 1:1 comparison, but think of the image having HDR metadata like an HDR YouTube video. Even though it’s compressed, it could still contain HDR attributes like 10-bit color or a certain screen brightness when viewing the specific images.

  • @generalpotato
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    1 year ago

    Ultra — for when Super Turbo wasn’t good enough.

    Neat tech though. Adoption is going to be interesting.

    • Shazbot
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      61 year ago

      The short version is that there are two images and sidecar/xmp file sandwiched into one file. First is the standard dynamic range image, what you’d expect to see from a jpeg. Second is the gain map, an image whose contents include details outside of SDR. The sidecar/xmp file has instructions on how to blend the two images together to create a consistent HDR image across displays.

      So its HDR-ish enough for the average person. I like this solution, especially after seeing the hellscape that is DSLR raw format support.