Jenith
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Samsung's newly announced high-end TVs support Eclipsa Audio and HDR10+ Advanced. Samsung developed these audio and video technologies in-house to rival Dolby Atmos and Dolby Vision 2. Samsung's Neo QLED, OLED, Micro RGB, and Micro LED TVs feature support for Eclipsa Audio and HDR10+ Advanced.
More details about supported devices could be announced in the near future.
Eclipsa Audio is a 3D spatial audio format similar to Dolby Vision and has been co-developed with Google using the Immersive Audio Model and Formats (IAMF). It was first unveiled last year and was a part of Samsung's high-end soundbars and TVs last year, but not a lot of support has come for the format yet. Newer soundbars and Music Studio speakers support it.
https://www.imeisource.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Samsung-Eclipsa-Audio-Google-YouTube-CES-2026.jpg
Currently, Eclipsa Audio is only available on some YouTube videos. In comparison, Dolby Atmos is used by all the popular audio and video streaming services, including Apple Music, Apple TV, Disney+, HBO Max, Netflix, Paramount Plus, Prime Video, Tidal, and Vudu. Ideally, Samsung TV Plus and YouTube Music would be the ideal services to support for Eclipsa Audio.
HDR10+ Advanced, which was announced last year, is an extension of HDR10+ Adaptive. It is a high dynamic range (HDR) format that competes with Dolby Vision 2 and has extremely similar capabilities, but is royalty-free. It brings optimized brightness and tone mapping. It supports up to 10,000 nits of brightness, up from HDR10+ Adaptive's 4,000 nits.
Other features of HDR10+ Advanced include advanced color control, AI-powered motion smoothing to reduce judder, local tone mapping, genre-based picture optimization, and real-time HDR processing for cloud gaming.
https://www.imeisource.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Samsung-TVs-HDR10-Plus-Advanced-Amazon-Prime-Video-CES-2026.jpg
Amazon's Prime Video will be the first video streaming to support HDR10+ Advanced. You should start seeing content mastered in the HDR10+ Advanced format on Prime Video starting this year. Roku has also been mentioned in the HDR10+ Advanced announcement press release.
The post Samsung’s new high-end TVs support Eclipsa Audio and HDR10+ Advanced appeared first on imeisource.
More details about supported devices could be announced in the near future.
Eclipsa Audio
Eclipsa Audio is a 3D spatial audio format similar to Dolby Vision and has been co-developed with Google using the Immersive Audio Model and Formats (IAMF). It was first unveiled last year and was a part of Samsung's high-end soundbars and TVs last year, but not a lot of support has come for the format yet. Newer soundbars and Music Studio speakers support it.
https://www.imeisource.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Samsung-Eclipsa-Audio-Google-YouTube-CES-2026.jpg
Currently, Eclipsa Audio is only available on some YouTube videos. In comparison, Dolby Atmos is used by all the popular audio and video streaming services, including Apple Music, Apple TV, Disney+, HBO Max, Netflix, Paramount Plus, Prime Video, Tidal, and Vudu. Ideally, Samsung TV Plus and YouTube Music would be the ideal services to support for Eclipsa Audio.
HDR10+ Advanced
HDR10+ Advanced, which was announced last year, is an extension of HDR10+ Adaptive. It is a high dynamic range (HDR) format that competes with Dolby Vision 2 and has extremely similar capabilities, but is royalty-free. It brings optimized brightness and tone mapping. It supports up to 10,000 nits of brightness, up from HDR10+ Adaptive's 4,000 nits.
Other features of HDR10+ Advanced include advanced color control, AI-powered motion smoothing to reduce judder, local tone mapping, genre-based picture optimization, and real-time HDR processing for cloud gaming.
https://www.imeisource.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Samsung-TVs-HDR10-Plus-Advanced-Amazon-Prime-Video-CES-2026.jpg
Amazon's Prime Video will be the first video streaming to support HDR10+ Advanced. You should start seeing content mastered in the HDR10+ Advanced format on Prime Video starting this year. Roku has also been mentioned in the HDR10+ Advanced announcement press release.
The post Samsung’s new high-end TVs support Eclipsa Audio and HDR10+ Advanced appeared first on imeisource.