> Actual HDR needs at least 10 bits per channel and a modern display with peak brightness far in excess of traditional monitors. Ideally over 1,000 nits compared to typical LCD brightness of about 200.
In the Apple Silicon era, the MacBook Pro has a 1,000 nit display, with peak brightness at 1,600 nits when displaying HDR content.
Affinity Studio [1] also supports editing and exporting "true" HDR images.
I have a 4K HDR OLED plugged into my Windows PC that works just fine for editing and viewing my photos.
I have no way, in general, to share those photos with you, not without knowing ahead of time what software you’re using. I’ll also have to whip up a web server with custom HTML and a bunch of hacks to encode my images that will work for you but not my friends with Android phones or Linux PCs.
In the Apple Silicon era, the MacBook Pro has a 1,000 nit display, with peak brightness at 1,600 nits when displaying HDR content.
Affinity Studio [1] also supports editing and exporting "true" HDR images.
[1]: https://www.affinity.studio