I understand that it dynamic range is necessary and having none is terrible (look up “loudness wars” in the recording industry), but it seems TV shows are no longer mastered for a actual home consumption.
Back in the day, we would work on our nice studio monitors, switch to a pair of NS10s to make sure it would sound good on a cheap Hifi, but we would also make it sound good on something garbage. Sometimes (always in fact) this was to the detriment of how sound on good gear, but 99% of people use garbage.
The Nvidia Shield TV (small Android media player) has a built-in way to normalize audio in all apps running on it. It works great!
We used to call it “compression” and itwas an essential part of the recording process. It seems TV shows don’t do that anymore.
It’s still called that way: Dynamic range compression
I know, but do TV shows to it?
I understand that it dynamic range is necessary and having none is terrible (look up “loudness wars” in the recording industry), but it seems TV shows are no longer mastered for a actual home consumption.
Back in the day, we would work on our nice studio monitors, switch to a pair of NS10s to make sure it would sound good on a cheap Hifi, but we would also make it sound good on something garbage. Sometimes (always in fact) this was to the detriment of how sound on good gear, but 99% of people use garbage.
It does? Can you give me a hint?
It’s part of the Nvidia firmware since version 9.1: https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/shield/software-update/
Right on. Something I’ve missed clearly.
It’s called Night listening mode. You can also place it in the quick settings menu for easier switching.
Location of the settings:
Great. I’ll give it a whirl. Thanks a lot.