Depends how you see this, because in practice the home system of Atmos is confined to two rings of speakers, and so you are confined to some vertical perspective which is quite reduced. (And the cinema system might struggle to pan positions between ground "bed" and the ceiling...)

I don't think that the current Atmos home system (E-AC3 + JOC) does also stereo + objects. (They do this in AC-4, probably.)

Stefan

----- Mensagem de Fons Adriaensen <f...@linuxaudio.org> ---------

 Data: Sun, 23 May 2021 22:50:28 +0200

 De: Fons Adriaensen <f...@linuxaudio.org>

On Sun, May 23, 2021 at 06:36:51PM +0100, Stefan Schreiber wrote:

Netflix streams Dolby Atmos at 768 kbit/s. (if available, so this is max.

 bitrate)

Atmos can use any mix of (fixed position) channels and (moving) objects.

 So it can be as simple as 5.0 or even stereo with a few objects for effects.



 In terms of required channel count (for distribution) it's actually a very

 effective format, for almost all content it will require less channels than

 high order Ambisonics.



 --

 FA



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