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Friday
Jun212013

Podcast #588: Netflix SuperHD

We received an email from Mark in Watertown South Dakota asking us about our opinion of Netflix SuperHD and we thought it would make a great idea for a feature. If you haven’t heard of it before, Netflix SuperHD claims to provide superior 1080p video quality for the same price as regular streaming. But not everyone is eligible. 

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Netflix SuperHD

We received an email from Mark in Watertown South Dakota asking us about our opinion of Netflix SuperHD and we thought what a great idea for a feature. If you haven’t heard of it before, Netflix SuperHD claims to provide superior 1080p video quality for the same price as regular streaming. But not everyone is eligible.

Requirements

To see if your internet provide supports SuperHD point your browser to: https://signup.netflix.com/superhd.

Then all you have to do is find the movies with the SuperHD logo. We couldn’t find a complete list anywhere but they were very easy to find. Some movie titles that we watched were, Lara Croft Tomb Raider, Act of Valor, Ghost Protocol, and Beverly Hills Cop. We even watched some TV shows like Burn Notice, 24, and How I Met Your Mother. Not everything was in Dolby Digital. And it didn’t matter the age of the title either. For instance Beverly Hills Cop was in DD and Ghost Protocol wasn’t. Burn Notice was and 24 wasn’t. We hope that eventually all the SuperHD movies will not only be digital but DD+.

Experience

Netflix says that you need a minimum of 5Mbps and 7Mbps is required for the full experience. Since our Internet consistently measures faster than 30 Mbps we were watching at the highest quality of 7Mbps.

For reference OTA ATSC signals can get as high as 18Mbps mpeg2 but in reality many stations multicast so the main HD signal may only get about 12Mbps.  Netflix streams in mpeg4 which is anywhere between 25% and 50% better than mpeg2. That roughly means the 7Mbps second SuperHD stream is the equivalent of a 9-11Mbps mpeg 2 stream which gets us close to over the air HD on a multicast channel. Well at least on paper anyway.

In actuality the picture looked quite good. Definitely better than DVD and as good as some TV channels. Was it as good as a Blu-ray? The answer is no. You could see some loss of clarity especially around edges but you had to get up close to see it. Other than that we didn’t see much of anything else that took away from the experience. The colors weren’t as vivid but they weren’t bad either. Pans were very smooth and looked natural. The quality did vary from title to title. The stream did take about 5 seconds longer to begin than non SuperHD titles. Start times will vary based on your downstream bandwidth.

As far as audio goes, the Dolby Digital tracks sounded great! When compared to DD tracks of the same movie on disc, it was hard to tell any difference. Even audio that was Pro Logic sounded good and we were able to get a decent surround experience. We are so spoiled now with 5.1 and 7.1 discrete channels. It wasn’t too long ago that we were excited to hear anything coming out of our surround speakers.

Bottom Line

Netflix is really pushing the streaming frontiers and they have come a long way. We can now sit on our couch on any given evening and find a high quality movie at moments notice. We anxiously await the day when we will be able to stream Blu-ray quality movies whenever we want. From what we have seen that day is not too far away!

 

 

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Reader Comments (2)

You were wondering about how control of HBO GO works on the Apple TV. Haven't used it on Apple TV, but I can describe how the login works through a standard web browser: When you login, it asks you for your cable provider, then your username and password. The credentials are then passed to the provider for verification. I assume that the Apple TV incarnation would use a similar method.

Great show, and keep up the good work!

June 21, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterJohn McNally

Another great podcast guys, keep up the good work!

June 24, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterDavid Ward

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