If you have a TV or monitor that supports 10-bit color and a decent sound system, this encode of
Leo’s heart tapped a Morse code against his ribs. He extracted the LSBs from the 10-bit depth gradient. A decryption key. Then a GPG signature. Then a plaintext message: Spectre.2015.1080p.10bit.BluRay.8CH.x265.HEVC-PSA
: 10-bit – This provides smoother color gradients and reduces "banding" in dark or complex scenes. If you have a TV or monitor that
In blind tests, most viewers cannot tell the difference between a high-bitrate x264 rip and a PSA 10-bit x265 rip on a 55-inch TV from 8 feet away. Then a GPG signature
If you have this file, you possess a highly efficient, high-quality "mini-rip." It balances the quality of the original Blu-ray (including 7.1 surround sound) with a manageable file size, thanks to the modern x265 compression technology. It is a solid version of the film for archival or viewing on modern HD screens.
You have a 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound system. You want the full Spectre sonic experience—the low rumble of the explosion in L'Américain, the whizz of Bond’s PPK. The audio ensures you aren't losing rear channels.
The most significant technical term in the filename is (and its container standard, HEVC/H.265 ).