Many displays are “sRGB-in-name-only”, SINO. 709 codes 0-35 are mapped to 8-bit sRGB 0 (using floor instead of round). 709 codes 0-26 are mapped to 8-bit sRGB 0 (if rounded to nearest). 709 code values are crushed into the 8 lowest 8-bit sRGB values. 709 codes 0-8 are mapped to 8-bit sRGB 0 (using floor instead of round). Some video cards use floor instead of round, so: 709 codes, 0-6, are mapped to 8-bit sRGB 0 (if rounded to nearest). 709 code values are crushed into the 7 lowest 8-bit sRGB values. Most sRGB displays are only 8 bit, so the 19 lowest 8-bit Rec. There is also loss of quality in the display. 709 video appear closer than a broadcast monitor. It is problematic because most videos are Rec.