 So HDMI 2.0a has been announced, you want to go right? Yes. So what's new with this? So HDMI 2.0a adds new HDR capability. So now HDMI is able to pass the new HDR standard, HDR which stands for High Dynamic Range. So many new content, everybody from Netflix to Blu-ray will start carrying new content that has HDR enabled, which will give much better luminosity and color and vibrance to the video. And now HDMI supports that within the HDMI 2.0a specification. So 4K is already awesome, but HDR is like a whole new level of awesome video? Yes, so 4K gives you resolution, but what HDR gives you is more dynamic impact. So everything kind of color, clarity, everything kind of pops out of the screen. So not only do you get clarity with 4K, but now with HDMI 2.0a you get HDR on top of 4K. But is it still realistic? Or does it kind of seem like animation style when it pops out, so much stuff pops out of it? Or is it actually like it really is supposed to look like in reality? So I think it depends on how it's recorded. So the director, whoever's producing the content can make it as realistic as possible, or as cartoonish or unrealistic as possible. It's up to them. Because some movies or TV shows, they want to make it very stylistic, artistic. So it may not look real, but it looks very good. Whereas someone else doing documentary or whatnot want to make it as real as possible. Because the camera doesn't have the same dynamic range as the eye. So with HDR you can do both. You can do it unrealistic or you can make it as very realistic. Sometimes I've seen Google plus all the HDR pictures and they look like a little bit like Photoshop or something. Yes. So now it's going to be video in 4K HDR. Yes. So there's 4K HDR TVs starting to ship or already shipping? Yes. Many manufacturers here are showing HDR capable TVs already and they're already shipping in the market. Availability depending on the region. But they already have it. Netflix, Hulu, Relieve Amazon as well. YouTube maybe soon? Maybe YouTube, I don't know. Ultra HD Blu-ray that I've announced. They'll support HDR. So as soon as content comes out you'll have to have access to them. So this is the paper you're giving out with information? Yes, that's the thing. Thank you for doing that survey. So there's this white color gamut. What kind of stuff are you talking about here? Is it more colors? Is it more bandwidth or is it the same bandwidth? And just different data? It's just color space. So color space is what the industry uses to map color. So if you look up basically the VT 2020 color space specification that has more details in it. But HDMI is just data transfer, right? Yes, for audio video. There's no color? Well, it has to carry everything, right? Video has color resolution, frame rate, color pixel depth. So many things we have to carry all the information now with HDR as well. So all the information has to be present from source to the display so that the display can render everything properly. That's the new thing that's going to happen. Like 4K cameras will record HDR 4K. Yes, they already have that available. So professional guys, professional cameras have been able to do 4K for a long time. There's nothing new for them. And so now finding the consumer have access to that type of content. Is it required to have the high and the low and the middle? Some kind of average? You know, like with the light? Is that how HDR has been made? So the luminosity range, again, that's specified by the HDR specification. So that's a different specification. One of them is CE861.3. So that specification defines luminosity. And the luminosity really depends on the TV as well. So some TVs will have very large luminosity. Whereas, you know, other TVs might have less. It depends, right? Alright, so there it is. HDR HDMI 2.0A. Find more information at HDMI.org.