dts-HD Master Audio is a high definition digital-based surround sound
format that supports up to 8-channels of surround decoding with
increased dynamic range, wider frequency response, and higher sampling
rate than standard other DTS formats. dts-HD Master Audio is one of the
several audio formats designed and employed by Blu-ray Disc and HD-DVD
technologies. dts-HD Master Audio is compatible with the audio portion
of the HDMI interface interface.
Like Dolby TrueHD, dts-HD Master Audio uses lossless compression. It offers a higher bit rate than dts-HD High Resolution, for overall audio quality that's, again, theoretically identical to the studio master. It should sound identical to a Dolby TrueHD soundtrack.
Like Dolby TrueHD, dts-HD Master Audio uses lossless compression. It offers a higher bit rate than dts-HD High Resolution, for overall audio quality that's, again, theoretically identical to the studio master. It should sound identical to a Dolby TrueHD soundtrack.
Gives more audio information embedded into the soundtrack, translating into
more detail and dynamics when played back on 96/24 compatible devices. If source device or home theater receiver is not
96/24 compatible, that is not a problem as non-compatible devices can
still access the 48kHz sampling rate and 16-bit depth that is present in
the soundtrack.
dts-HD Master Audio contains 2 data streams: the original DTS core stream
and the additional "residual" stream which contains the "difference"
between the original signal and the lossy compression DTS core stream.
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