Larry Ellison used to have a TV projector in his house, with the light output for a drive-in movie theater but aimed at a small screen, so he could watch movies in broad daylight. That was before everyone got bright screens.
I don't see how the result would avoid being either uncomfortably bright or still having shitty contrast due to the unavoidably high "black" levels from the ambient light.
Modern HDR screens already cause the same subconscious perception as the sun would. You flinch, your eyes adjust, you even move a little bit back and feel a kind of warmth that isn't actually there.
Animats|2 years ago
Larry Ellison used to have a TV projector in his house, with the light output for a drive-in movie theater but aimed at a small screen, so he could watch movies in broad daylight. That was before everyone got bright screens.
account42|2 years ago
kuschku|2 years ago
subb|2 years ago
account42|2 years ago
Also, simulating realistic processes is not incompatible with tonemapping the result to be able to display it on limited screens.
astrodust|2 years ago