Next-gen Apple TV 4K streaming requirements, native resolution revealed

Posted:
in iPod + iTunes + AppleTV edited September 2017
The iOS 11 GM leak continues to yield details about upcoming Apple products, with a Saturday discovery revealing 4K streaming requirements and resolution standards for an as-yet-unreleased Apple TV model.


Source: Steven Troughton-Smith via Twitter


According to code points uncovered in Apple's iOS 11 GM by developer Steven Troughton-Smith, who subsequently published the information to Twitter, users will need a stable 15Mbps connection to stream 4K content on the next-generation Apple TV.

Discovered in a code string for what appears to be automated hardware troubleshooting responses is the header "NetworkNo4KForYouSubtitle," which triggers the text, "Your Internet connection speed might have dropped below 15Mpbs, or there could be a problem with your home network." The response applies a bandwidth floor for 4K streaming on Apple's set-top box.

Elsewhere in the leaked firmware, Troughton-Smith found evidence of display resolutions and color options. Specifically, the fifth-generation Apple TV will output in 2160p UHD and support both Dolby Vision and HDR10 formats. Chroma subsampling, a form of compression that sacrifices color information for luminance data, is available in 4:2:0, 4:2:2 and 4:4:4 for HDR10 and standard YCbCr.

Potential Apple TV support for Dolby Vision and HDR10 first showed up in last month's HomePod firmware leak, which also contained references to the HLG, or Hybrid Log-Gamma, format.

Apple is rumored to unveil next-gen Apple TV hardware at its special media event on Tuesday, though not much is known about the device beyond what little information was revealed in the recent software leaks.

On Friday, a leaked golden master version of Apple's soon-to-be-released iOS 11 operating system made its way to blogs and prominent Twitterati. So far, the firmware has provided confirmation of an LTE Apple Watch, an AirPods revision and a slew of software features due for release with the hotly anticipated "iPhone X."

AppleInsider will be at Apple Park next week offering live coverage of Apple's expected product announcements.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 9
    Well, I think we know everything at this point...

    Seems it's absolutely impossible to keep anything a secret these days. Credit reporting agencies getting hacked, Apple losing all of their product announcement surprises... what the heck is next?
    randominternetpersondoozydozenwatto_cobraAvieshek
  • Reply 2 of 9
    SoliSoli Posts: 10,035member
    Well, I think we know everything at this point...

    Seems it's absolutely impossible to keep anything a secret these days. Credit reporting agencies getting hacked, Apple losing all of their product announcement surprises... what the heck is next?
    Keep in mind that the hack and leak you mentioned were publicized. There are surely many other hacks that a company doesn't report on or waits years to report, and many others where the company simply doesn't even know they were hacked at all.
    RacerhomieXdoozydozen
  • Reply 3 of 9
    The 4K specs "revealed" here are not exactly secret.  2160p for those color spaces is bog-standard
    for HEVC/H.265 chatted up months ago at WWDC.   If my $279 4K TV (Samsung/Costco/last year's model) displays that
    (in HDR even), why wouldn't the next-gen Apple TV transmit this?   As for the 15 Mbps "reveal" -- 
    that makes perfect sense, too.   I.e. Netflix currently advertises to regular folk that for their 4K material encoded
    with H.264, 25 Mbps is needed.   Well, since Apple claimed at WWDC that their HEVC encoder 
    uses 40% fewer bits on average, thats 15 Mbps.   Not secret sauce.
    edited September 2017 RacerhomieXdoozydozen
  • Reply 4 of 9
    chasmchasm Posts: 3,296member
    It’s Steve Troughton-Smith.
  • Reply 5 of 9
    slurpyslurpy Posts: 5,384member
    We’re such heavy users of the Apple TV (air playing, gaming, Netflix, Plex, news, etc) so I’m super excited about this update since my TV supports 4K and HDR. 
    doozydozenwatto_cobraAvieshek
  • Reply 6 of 9
    chasm said:
    It’s Steve Troughton-Smith.
    Never heard of him before. What does that mean? Good? Bad?
  • Reply 7 of 9
    Something that hasn't been mentioned (likely due to Apple's history) is the new Apple TV being in 2160p means that they're going to be the second largest portion of the gaming market able to do 1080+ gaming. Consoles all struggle with resolutions above 1080 (and even frame rates above 30FPS), so the next Apple TV will scare them a little more than I think they're imagining.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 9
    Rec. 2100 ? 
  • Reply 9 of 9
    loquitur said:
    The 4K specs "revealed" here are not exactly secret.  2160p for those color spaces is bog-standard
    for HEVC/H.265 chatted up months ago at WWDC.   If my $279 4K TV (Samsung/Costco/last year's model) displays that
    (in HDR even), why wouldn't the next-gen Apple TV transmit this?   As for the 15 Mbps "reveal" -- 
    that makes perfect sense, too.   I.e. Netflix currently advertises to regular folk that for their 4K material encoded
    with H.264, 25 Mbps is needed.   Well, since Apple claimed at WWDC that their HEVC encoder 
    uses 40% fewer bits on average, thats 15 Mbps.   Not secret sauce.
    The problem is that all these TVs claiming to support 4K only do it for video, which isn't that widely available (besides for Netflix content). I'm more excited about my 4K TV finally displaying interface elements and text at 4K instead of displaying blurry-pixelated 1080p (or worse for some Android TV apps) UIs. The claims that the difference between 4K and 1080p not being observable from a distance are BS, and there are plenty of situations when I get closer to my TV and it would be nice for things to be as crisp as my TV is capable of displaying them.
    edited September 2017
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