It's a huge pet peeve of mine that all the Dish boxes just convert between 720p and 1080i. If I had the choice I'd love having the channel's native resolution, but I'd also be perfectly happy with the picture being upconverted to 1080p.
How are you getting that info, by pressing "Info" or something on the TV ? I just happened to do this earlier today and my 1080p TV showed "1080i" as the info. I suspect it's telling what is being supplied, not what it's outputting.Oddly, All of my tvs present the input resolution, unless directed otherwise.
Hopper 1080i, tv 10180i
BluRay 1080p, tv 1080p
Those concerned with 3rd conversion at tv level should have tv not converting.?.?
My tvs show input resolution on power up...How are you getting that info, by pressing "Info" or something on the TV ? I just happened to do this earlier today and my 1080p TV showed "1080i" as the info. I suspect it's telling what is being supplied, not what it's outputting.
Because your are seeing a frame boxed resolution it shows your TV is still displaying native 1080p resolution and your smaller resolution just fits inside of it.My tvs show input resolution on power up...
I can verify pass-through resolution by connecting computer to tv via hdmi.
As I change the computer output resolution, it changes on the tv...
Computer set to 1920x1080 fills screen.
Computer set at 800x600 yields a small frame-boxed picture, until stretched (upscaled) to fit.
Do you have a link to the HD channel list that is currently in use?1. Receiver's output resolution is important: this means whatever resolution a given channel is broadcasting needs to stay that way. There is s list available online that tells you what every single hd channel is currently using. Some are 720p but more are 1080i. Both hd, but not the same format.
You can find it at hd-report dot comDo you have a link to the HD channel list that is currently in use?
How are you getting that info, by pressing "Info" or something on the TV ? I just happened to do this earlier today and my 1080p TV showed "1080i" as the info. I suspect it's telling what is being supplied, not what it's outputting.