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Mummelmann said:
I'm much more annoyed by the massive compression of streamed 4K content, my blu-ray 4K movies are just a completely different level in the visual department. Netflix and Amazon content looks washed out and unsaturated in comparison, it's especially annoying that you can't tinker with settings more to fit your own connection speed. Streaming 4K looks to be fitted for a more or less mediocre connection, but those with higher speeds are being shafted, there's a reason why some are willing to spend a few thousand bucks on a TV.

4K streaming runs at a lower bit rate than old blu-ray. It does have a more advanced compression algorithm, yet that's still throwing detail away. Netflix 4K HDR runs at 18 mbps (picture + sound) 1080p blu-ray between 18 and 38 mbps for picture alone and 5 mbps for lossless compressed sound. (There are multiple sound tracks, max blu-ray total throughput is 54 mbps) 4k blu-ray can support as high as 128 mbps total and also uses the more advanced compression algorithms.

Blu-ray still outperforms 4K streaming in most cases. Still scenes have better detail in 4K streaming, yet when stuff is moving, bandwidth is what matters. Blu-ray having the ability to ramp up to 38 mbps in action scenes leaves 4K streaming far behind.

Anyway there seem to be plenty problems with Netflix not showing 24p content correctly and delivering it as 60fps with pull down filter. I'll stick to blu-ray for quality.