Netflix in 4K and HEVC Decode

The NVIDIA SHIELD is currently the only Netflix 4K-certified set-top box in the market. This certification involves two important requirements:

  • Presence of a HDMI 2.0 port with HDCP 2.2 capability
  • Presence of a hardware decoder for HEVC Main and Main10 profiles

NVIDIA was the first in the PC space to bring HDMI 2.0 together with HDCP 2.2 support as well as a hardware decoder for HEVC in the GTX 960. They are also extending this lead to the SoC space with the Tegra X1. Thus, the NVIDIA SHIELD Android TV has turned out to be the first set-top box to meet Netflix's criteria for 4K certification.

The UltraHD-capable Netflix streaming plan is the highest-end one, coming in at $11.99 per month before taxes. If the SHIELD is connected to a HDMI 2.0 4Kp60 sink supporting HDCP 2.2 and the Netflix account is on a supported plan, the Netflix app's UI presents a row of Ultra HD 4K streams in addition to the generic categories. We tested out Netflix 4K on a Samsung HU6950 without an AV receiver inbetween.

Netflix has a special test stream that shows the characteristics of the currently playing stream. As expected, the SHIELD had no trouble in getting to the 4K encode.

In the adaptive streaming process, we came across a host of different encodes. They are listed in the gallery below.

Regular readers of our HTPC reviews might remember that the Windows 8.1 Netflix app tops out with a 5.8 Mbps 1080p H.264 stream. On devices with HEVC support, it appears that this is replaced by a 5.16 Mbps HEVC Main10 stream at the same resolution. There is also a higher bit-rate version (6.96 Mbps) with similar characteristics. Beyond that, we have the 4K stream at 9.6 Mbps. Unfortunately, we don't know the exact characteristics of the encode, but, based on the immediately preceding lower bit-rate streams, it is probably a HEVC Main10 encode too.

The Netflix app gives us an indication that the SHIELD has no trouble with HEVC. In order to confirm this, we put our HEVC test suite through Android's native Video Player.

The video shows perfect playback of 4Kp24, 4Kp25 and 4Kp30 HEVC Main and Main10 profile streams. For 4Kp60, we only have Main profile videos, and the SHIELD has no trouble with that.

On one hand, it is nice to see the SHIELD Android TV's 4K Netflix capabilities as well as support for high frame-rate HEVC playback in a power-efficient system. Though the 4K TV adoption rate is still very low - it's the start of what will be a long process - of anything and everything NVIDIA needed to do to secure their spot as the set top box to have for 4K TVs, getting Netflix 4K support in place is it.

On the other hand, it also reminds us of the sorry state of HTPCs with respect to HDMI 2.0, HDCP 2.2 and HEVC playback. For enthusiasts, it is imperative that PCs catch up soon, given that local media streaming is not a focus point for the SHIELD.

Local Media Playback Evaluation Gaming - NVIDIA's Trump Card
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  • funtasticguy - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    As usual, what a great and thorough review!

    I have 2 questions:

    1) Can you plug in 2 or more USB hard drives and use Kodi to read files from both external hard drives?

    2) Does it offer read and write support for external NTFS hard drives?

    Thanks!
  • ZOONAMI - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Any one know what the hdd speed is? Assuming 5400 but hoping for 7200rpm.
  • ganeshts - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Yes on both counts
  • funtasticguy - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Awesome! Thanks for your reply!
  • ZOONAMI - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Any one know what the hdd speed is? Assuming 5400 but hoping for 7200rpm
  • DanaGoyette - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Since it has HDMI 2.0, can it drive 1920x1080 at 120Hz? If your monitor is 120Hz, you can play 24fps videos smoothly, by showing each frame 5 times.
  • ganeshts - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    The Android TV framework currently allows only 60 Hz refresh rate. But, yes, hardware is capable of 120 Hz output at 1080p.
  • frankiepoon - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Can the native android player plays 4K HEVC 60fps TS smoothly? e.g. Samsung 4K Demo
  • ganeshts - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Yes, you can see it in our HEVC decode section.
  • frankiepoon - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Can you test if this Japanese 4K HEVC TS play smoothly? (video sync with audio at the begining)
    https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B2z6bZD6sZHreFV2a...
    (4K HEVC 60fps 10bit BT.2020)

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