NVIDIA's RTX Video SDK (software development kit) is now available with the debut of RTX Video HDR for DaVinci Resolve and VLC.
NVIDIA RTX Video HDR Now Supported in DaVinci Resolve; VLC Media Player Also Supports RTX Video HDR and SDK Available
NVIDIA's RTX Video is expanding support to popular browsers and media players, with the latest deployment being in Mozilla Firefox, and NVIDIA is expected to open up the RTX Video SDK today with even more integrations.

Starting today, our RTX Video SDK is available to developers, enabling them to take advantage of various aspects of the technology, including AI upscaling, sharpening, reduction of compression artifacts and HDR conversion, and integrate it natively within their apps.
NVIDIA RTX Video, the popular AI-powered super resolution feature supported in Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge and Mozilla Firefox browsers, is now available as an SDK to all developers, enabling native integration of AI for upscaling, sharpening, compression artifact reduction and high dynamic range (HDR) conversion.
Coming soon to video editing software Blackmagic Design's DaVinci Resolve and Wondershare Filmora, RTX Video will enable video editors to upscale lower quality video files to 4K resolution and convert standard dynamic range source files to HDR. Additionally, free media player VLC media will soon be adding RTX Video HDR to its existing super resolution feature.
Via NVIDIA
Additionally, NVIDIA today announced that Blackmagic Design's DaVinci Resolve and Wondershare Filmora will also gain support for RTX Video. Finally, VLC media player, which already has support for RTX Video upscaling, will expand to RTX Video HDR.
This makes our AI video enhancements available to the majority of PC users across major video players and editors. Support for these apps will roll out soon, so stay tuned for more information in the coming weeks.
