It’s a uniquely modern annoyance. You’re lying in bed, scrolling through your social feed in a dim room. Everything is comfortable and easy on the eyes—until an HDR video auto-plays and blasts your retinas with the intensity of a dying star. Or perhaps it’s the opposite problem: you’re trying to watch a beautifully shot, moody prestige drama on your phone, and the dark scenes are a crushed, unwatchable mess of gray blocks.
For years, we’ve just accepted this as the cost of doing business with High Dynamic Range (HDR) video. It’s a technology that promises lifelike contrast and colors, but in practice, often feels like a wildcard. Depending on the screen, the room lighting, and the operating system, the exact same video can look spectacular on a premium living room TV and completely broken on a tablet.
But this wild west era of HDR might finally be ending, thanks to an unexpected alliance. In a move that caught much of the home theater and tech world off guard, Google, Apple, and NBCUniversal have quietly joined forces to build a completely new standard. It’s officially known by the highly technical moniker SMPTE ST 2094-50, but you’re going to know it as Eclipsa Video.

Administered by the same industry consortium behind HDR10+, Eclipsa Video is stepping onto the scene as an open-source alternative to proprietary titans like Dolby Vision. But rather than just sparking another messy format war for television supremacy, Eclipsa is explicitly designed to fix the cross-device chaos that makes current HDR so frustrating for the average user.
To understand why this is a big deal, you have to look at how Eclipsa fundamentally changes the relationship between a video file and your screen. Right now, when a display receives an HDR signal, it essentially makes an educated guess on how to render the extreme highs and lows, a process called tone mapping. If the screen’s hardware isn’t capable of reaching the peak brightness the video demands, it often just clips the highlights, turning subtle details like a bright cloud or a glowing neon sign into a flat white blob.
Eclipsa Video solves this by baking a set of dynamic, frame-by-frame instructions directly into the video file. Think of it as the film’s original colorist riding shotgun in your phone, telling the screen exactly how to adapt if it runs out of hardware capability. Google refers to this as headroom-adaptive gain curves. Instead of forcing a one-size-fits-all brightness setting, the embedded metadata intelligently compresses shadows and mid-tones on the fly to preserve highlight details, even on a screen with limited brightness or in a room with rapidly changing ambient light.
Just as importantly, Eclipsa introduces something called a reference white anchor. This is the feature that will save your eyes during a late-night scrolling session. It essentially establishes a strict baseline for normal brightness, meaning standard text, app interfaces, and standard-range colors are locked to a comfortable, predictable level. Any extra brightness power the screen has is strictly reserved for the HDR highlights. Finally, standard and HDR content can share the exact same screen real estate without throwing the display’s backlight into a chaotic frenzy.
The fact that Apple and Google are collaborating on this is notable in itself. The two tech giants have been edging closer on audio and video standards over the last few years, but Eclipsa feels like a much more direct shot across the bow at Dolby’s dominance. Following the rollout of Eclipsa Audio—an open-source alternative to Dolby Atmos that gained serious traction recently—this video counterpart completes the ecosystem. With NBCUniversal throwing its weight behind the standard as a major content creator and distributor, Eclipsa has the muscle to actually force a shift in how media is mastered and delivered.
Interestingly, this new standard isn’t setting its sights on your living room wall—at least not immediately. According to the HDR10+ Alliance, the initial rollout for Eclipsa Video is targeting smartphones, tablets, and laptops. This makes perfect sense. Mobile devices are where ambient lighting changes the most drastically, and where the clash between SDR interfaces and HDR content is most apparent. Support is already being woven deeply into the Android 17 release, meaning native capture and playback will be available on next-generation devices out of the box, with integration also slated for upcoming versions of the Chrome browser.
For creators, the appeal is obvious: a guarantee that artistic intent survives the perilous journey from a professional Hollywood grading monitor to a commuter’s smartphone. For the rest of us, the pitch is much simpler. Eclipsa Video promises an end to the sudden, blinding flashbangs of late-night social media, and a future where our favorite shows actually look the way they were meant to be seen, regardless of the screen we happen to be holding.
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