![]() Sound using a pair of stereo headphones and a specialized head related DTS Headphone:X - Designed to reproduce 12CH binaural surround.For more information, see DTS:X Overview & First Listen. DTS:X - Similar to Atmos but claims to be speaker agnostic and uses DTS HD as the core.DTS HD Master Audio - Similar to Dolby True HD and the defacto standard for Blu-ray with data rates as his at 24Mbps for Blu-ray.DTS-HD HR builds a set of enhanced extensions around a DTS encoding core that can be encoded for improved audio by the AV Receiver if it supports it. DTS-HD HR - similar to DD+ as it offers a fixed bit rate and usually less compressed version of DTS for Blu-ray with up to 6Mbps and 7.1CH audio, but like DD+ it is still a lossy format scheme.DTS 96/24 - Allows the delivery of 5.1 channels of 24-bit, 96 kHz audio on regular DVD's by adding an extension to enable 96/24 sound reproduction.DTS ES - Same as above for DTS but with the addition of a rear discrete center channel (for DTS ES Discrete) or a non-discrete rear center channel for (DTS ES Matrixed).DTS max data rate is 1.5 Mbps for DVD and Blu-ray. DTS - Similar to Dolby Digital but with the potential of better sound quality due to less compression being used and better surround channel separation.For more information, see Dolby Atmos Explained.Ītmos Mobile - Similar to Dolby Headphone but enhanced to simulate aģD immersive Atmos experience on mobile devices and regular headphones. HD or DD+ and an extension for height channels to offer object basedĪudio for up to 32 channels in the home. Dolby Atmos - 3D Immersive surround format using Dolby True. ![]() Overlayed with PLIIx decoding for a 7.1 surround representation. Technology to create the sensation of multiple loudspeakers in a room Dolby Headphone - Uses powerful digital signal processing (DSP).It is capable of up to 18Mbps data rates andġ92kHz/24 bit audio for 6 channels and 96kHz/24 bit audio for 7.1. Dolby True HD - Lossless (bit for bit perfect) 5.1 to 7.1 fullyĭiscrete full range surround sound format for Blu-ray and AV receivers.DD EX - Same as above for the DD format but with the addition of a rear derived non-discrete center channel.The spec allows it to achieve data rates of up to 6 Mbps and up to 13.1 channels but to date this never materialized in any media formats as far as we know. Dolby Digital Plus(+) - A significant improvement over Dolby Digital by increasing bitrates to 1.7Mbps on Blu-ray and full 7.1 Channel Audio.A digital connection (TOSLINK, coax, or HDMI) between the source device (usually a DVD player) and an AV receiver is required. It is a lossy format (not bit for bit perfect) with max data rate of 448kbps for DVD and 640kbps for Blu-ray. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |