samozrejme viem, ze v predajniach maju presaturovane farby, telky nastavene na predvadzaci mod atd. ale aj tak...na druhej strane, farboslepy tiez niesom

Osobne zastávam názor že riešiť v dnešnej dobe nejaké HDR nemá význam. Je to na začiatku sú tu 10tky štandardov a špecifikácii, výrobcovia si s tým robia čo chcú a pod. Uvidíme o pár rokov.HDR has nothing to do with resolution. 4K resolution refers (rather inaccurately) to the number of pixels on your TV -- the number of the individual dots that make up the image. HDR and wide color affect the range of brightness and colors those dots produce; the "quality" of the pixels, if you will, not the number. That's why some people refer to HDR as "not more pixels, but better pixels."
Right now all TVs with HDR and wide color are Ultra HD TVs. But because the technologies themselves are separate, a non-4K HDR isn't impossible.
This separation of resolution and HDR/WCG isn't just theory. Netflix and other services will stream non-4K HDR under certain circumstances. When you first start streaming an HDR show, often the video quality will start out lower and ramp up to 4K resolution -- but it's HDR the whole time. If your Internet bandwidth can't sustain 4K video, they'll send a lower resolution like 1080p or 720p -- but it stays in HDR. If your Internet is really bad, you might even get standard-definition HDR(!).