

Look at it this way, Navigation is "Pretty" but not very Intuitive. GPU Open, while it was a good step in the right Direction when it was launched., but has become so infrequently updated with the UX being honestly very bare bones. but they don't really have any Prosumer Hardware., not unless you count the Radeon VII, which is in such short supply it might as well be Faery Dust. Sure, they have their Workstation (Radeon Pro) Hardware. In a way, I don't blame a lot of Studios for not supporting AMD SDKs.ĪMD isn't really doing much in the way to get more of their Hardware IN to Development Studios. It's not uncommon for this to happen either.

the issue with such is Half AMD and Half Microsoft fault., which given neither of them seem to talk to each other directly is infuriating, to say the least)Īs noted the issue at play here, essentially comes down to Netflix using the Intel and NVIDIA Encoder APIs.
#Hevc codec gtx 460 pro
there's another thread about this on the Radeon Pro Series GPU. (which is great if you're Display also supports the DTB Standard for HDR/WCG, as opposed to just Natively providing such.
#Hevc codec gtx 460 windows 10
You do have PlayReady 3.0 Support., as this is what Windows 10 uses for HDR and WCG. This is likely the case, and so I'd strongly recommend that you suggest to Netflix that they support the AMD AMF (Advanced Media Framework) SDK from GPUOpen that provides extensive support for Video Codecs across all UVD and VCE Devices., which as a note is Radeon HD 5000 or newer) IF this doesn't enable Netflix HDR (which honestly I don't recall if it does or doesn't., as I run a Native 12bit Desktop that somewhat makes the difference to HDR10 fairly 'Minimal' without being on a WCG Display, such-as Quantum Colour from Samsung) then it's likely because they're just using the Intel and NVIDIA Codec SDKs as opposed to simply supporting the Native Format. Oh and I'd recommend these for Pre-GTX 10-Series GPUs as well., not just AMD GCN GPUs / Ryzen CPUs. Now as a point-of-note., you will need to Search the Microsoft Store for "HEVC Video Extensions from the Device Manufacturer" as well as the "HEVC Video Extensions"., as both of these will be needed. with this said this does suggest that they're supporting HDR exclusively via the HEVC Format. So there strictly speaking shouldn't be any issues. Actually Netflix HDR is only supported by Pascal (GTX 10-Series) at present., and 'select' Partnership Intel HD (7-Series CPU) Graphics … AMD does support both HDR10 and Dolby Vision (which apparently Netflix uses)., as well as Microsoft PlayReady 3.0
