MaZa said: Ycbcr can send 4:4:4. Ycbcr is a a signal format different from RGB and meant to be more efficient. Ycbcr has Luma (brightness) information separate from chroma (color) which allows the subsampling of the latter (4:2:2 and 4:2:0) for more bandwidth but when you use 4:4:4 its virtually identical with RGB.
Radeon GPUs introduced next year will enable HDR movie playback using HDMI 2.0 and DisplayPort 1.3, AMD says. AMD claims 1080p with HDR will look better than a 4K image with SDR. Pretty much all of those questions need answering before anyone can say that a card will work because there are plenty of cards that support HDMI 2.0 output, but not all of them will work with streaming, or 4K content, or HDR, or HDR+color depth+4k+60 frames per second, or TV/monitor resolution+acceptible frame rate for gaming. These guidelines will help you set up your Intel® NUC to play 4K or HDR content. Check the technical product specifications for your Intel NUC. See the Processor Graphics Subsystem or Graphics Capabilities section. Check the features in the product manual or on the manufacturer's website. What is needed to play 4K, HDR or 3D content on Intel1 HDMI 1.4b 1 RJ45 2 USB 3.1 Gen 1 1 Headphone & Microphone Audio Jack. If the "new and improved" version does not support HDMI 2.0, I would not expect the previous version to support it either. It seems that the extra care and attention required was deemed worthwhile for the "performance" 7000 series, but not for the 5000 series machines.What HDMI 2.0b does not define, however, HDR, expanded color space, you’ll need to make sure your devices support HDMI 2.0. But, if you already have High Speed HDMI Cables, you should be beYcc5O.