I’m still confused. All the HDR processing should be done on the client side if it is an HDR capable display playing a compatible format. The Shield can play most formats so that shouldn’t be the issue. How do you know HDR isn’t displaying properly?
Tone mapping is for converting HDR content to SDR for non-HDR displays. Why do you need it for an HDR TV?
"To start, we’re offering each Premium individual, as well as plan managers for Family and Duo accounts, 15 hours of listening per month—giving them the ability to enjoy as many titles as they want within that monthly allocation.
[…]
For those super audiophiles who use up their 15 hours before their monthly billing cycles refresh, you can purchase a 10-hour top-up to finish that series. Not sure how many hours you have left? Check it at any time in your in-app settings. "
No cost listed on how much the top-ups are.
New meds can start working right away, but it’ll take your body a little bit to get used to it.
Make sure you’re taking it as early in the day as possible. Meds are like caffeine, they’ll keep you up at night. Not to mention, taking too much melatonin or too late can keep you up instead of making it easier to sleep.
All that focus and lack of despair is good. The meds are helping you focus on things you should focus on, rather than worrying all the time.
Stick with it for a month, be conscious of the effects of the meds, and if things don’t get better, talk to your doctor.
You could accomplish this with Tasker if you wanted to dip your toes into some programming.
I guess compared to your situation, they’re fantastic. I have a static IP and copper connection, but they don’t offer any symmetric plans. I’m stuck with 200down/15up and the best up they offer is 500down/25up.
I’ve got a 1070 that I use for transcodes and some tonemapping where necessary and I don’t have GPU related issues (My ISP causes their own problems). I can usually run a few small streams at once, and I have a PC that I use to handle files too large to reliably stream to my Chromecast with Google TV over WiFi.
I think I saw he has some patents on it in the video. You could probably use existing hardware and those patents to reconstruct as needed.