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Anonymous
Well, you can "fake" HDR by using Photoshop to make different "exposures" of an image, and then use an app like Photomatix Pro to unite them as an HDR. The results still aren't as good as if you actually snapped different exposures, but then you do get some HDR benefits if you use them for lighting 3d scenes and so forth.
Maybe in the future our TVs and Monitors will have dynamic range (think really bright explosions and such), but right now it's hard to appreciate that extra information unless you use it to light something else.
If there are legitimate uses for HDR to improve photography, please paste a link so I might learn moar. Otherwise, I don't get the "how a single image can be improved through HDR" thing.
Unless it's just the Penthouse vaseline-on-the-lens look that HDR seems to have on regular monitors.
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