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How To Enable HDR in Windows 10

HDR, or High Dynamic Range, delivers a dramatic upgrade in brightness, color, and contrast compared to SDR, or Standard Dynamic Range. <br><br>HDR content looks more brilliant and more detailed than SDR. Youu2019ll notice an unmistakable difference when viewing a movie, TV show, or gaming thatu2019s mastered for HDR.<br><br>For More Information - https://mightypccleaner.com/how-to-enable-hdr-on-windows/

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How To Enable HDR in Windows 10

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  1. How to enable HDR in Windows 10

  2. HDR, or High Dynamic Range, delivers a dramatic upgrade in brightness, color, and contrast compared to SDR, or Standard Dynamic Range. HDR content looks more brilliant, and more detailed, than SDR. You’ll notice an unmistakable difference when viewing a movie, TV show, or gaming that’s mastered for HDR.

  3. How to enable HDR in Windows 10 ● ● Open the Windows 10 Start Menu. Select Settings, which is represented by a gear icon. The Settings window will open. Select System. You’ll now see Display settings. Scroll down until you see the Windows HD Color section. Flip the Use HDR toggle to On. ● ● ●

  4. An HDR-Capable TV or Monitor Not all HDR is created equal—cheaper TVs and monitors may not be able to get bright enough, or use local dimming to get dark enough, to really take full advantage of HDR. If your gaming monitor says it’s Display HDR 400 or Display HDR 600, for example, that means those highlights can only reach 400 or 600 nits, respectively.

  5. An HDR-Capable Graphics Chip To communicate with your display, you need a GPU capable of HDR, which means an Nvidia GTX 950 or later, AMD’s Radeon R9 380 or later, or—if you’re running Intel’s integrated graphics—a 7th-generation Kaby Lake CPU or later. Note that these are the bare minimums, and higher-end cards will be able to handle better output settings (more on that later).

  6. A Quality HDMI or DisplayPort Cable Most modern HDMI cables can carry a 4K signal, but not all will necessarily perform equally well. If you want 4K at 60Hz with HDR, you're best off with one labeled Premium High Speed or 18Gbps, as described in our HDMI cable guide. For 4K at 120Hz with HDR, you'll need one labeled Ultra Premium High Speed, or 48Gbps.

  7. Enable HDR in Windows 10 Before you mess with your software, you’ll want to tweak a few things in your TV’s settings. Somewhere, you should find an option to enable HDR color capabilities—LG calls it “Deep Color,” Samsung calls it “Input Signal Plus,” and other manufacturers may have their own names. You may also have to enable this on your receiver, if you have one—mine was hidden under a somewhat secret button combo listed in the manual.

  8. Thank You Contact Us : contact@mightypccleaner.com https://mightypccleaner.com/how-to-enable-hdr-on-windows/

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