I'm looking forward to spending $3 to test it on my Mitsubishi 57732 and compare it to my I am Legend HD DVD.
My SONY KDL-40V2500 1080P fails the test. What's the deal? Any updates on this?
Yup. Talked to Dish yesterday, and they told me that it wasn't their fault and that I needed to take it up with Sony.
Called them back today and told them that apparently, this is happening to EVERYONE that has Sony TV's and suggested that they kick this up to engineering. We'll see.
Till then, I believe that we're SOL.!!
Wouldn't it have been easier just to offer 1080p rather then 1080p/24? I realize 1080p/24 is the top of the heap but all I am reading is failure after failure. Am I really missing something if its not 24? That along with I guess you have to rent the movie just to do the test anyway truly burns me. I won't bite on it. DirecTv's rollout sometime at the end of the year for the same feature I hope will learn from this seemingly fiasco.
The video information in the VOD file is like what is found on a BD disk, 24fps - 24p. Most displays convert this through a process called 3:2 pulldown to work at 60hz or 60fps. This introduces judder in the film visible especially during panoramic panning scenes and can be distracting to frustrating to see. Some displays claim to be compatible with a 1080p24 signal and then they convert it to 1080p60.
Some displays now claim 120hz capability HOWEVER this could mean that the 24p signal is converted to 60fps by 3:2 pulldown and then doubled to 120 so you have to be careful.
For these Sonys that don't seem to be reporting their 24p capability correctly, maybe the 120hz mode needs to be engaged on the tv before the dvr test is performed in order to properly inform the dvr that 24p compatibility is available. Something is obviously missing in the edid information Sony passes in the handshake. Not every manufacturer agrees on the same implementation of HDMI and I'm not surprised that Sony could be one of them that has their own ideas.
For these Sonys that don't seem to be reporting their 24p capability correctly, maybe the 120hz mode needs to be engaged on the tv before the dvr test is performed in order to properly inform the dvr that 24p compatibility is available.
the 3 standards are 1920:1080 60i, 1920:1080 30p and 1920:1080 24p
The miscommunication for 1080p is most likely the handshake for the HDMI hasn't be told that your set is compatible. Which means in short it hasn't be added to the list of sets that work w/ the E* receiver. Now here is an excerpt from Wiki about 1080p.
Broadcasting standards
ATSC and DVB support 1080p video, but only at the frame rates of 24, 25, and 30 frames per second (1080p24, 1080p25, 1080p30) and their 1000/1001-rate slow versions (e.g., 29.97 frames per second instead of 30). Higher frame rates, such as 1080p50 and 1080p60, could only be sent with more bandwidth or if a more advanced codec (such as H.264/MPEG-4 AVC and AVS) were used. Higher frame rates such as 1080p50 and 1080p60 are foreseen as the future broadcasting standard for production.[3]
In the United States, the ATSC is considering amending its standard to allow the incorporation of the newer codecs for optional usage like the DVB Project consortium already has done with DVB-S2.[4] However, doing so is not expected to result in widespread consumer availability of broadcast 1080p60 programming, since most of the existing digital television sets or external digital receivers in use in the United States would still only be capable of decoding the older, less-efficient MPEG-2 codec, while the bandwidth limitations do not allow for broadcasting two simultaneous streams on the same broadcast channel (e.g. both a 1080i MPEG-2 stream alongside a 1080p MPEG-4 stream).
So should we sell our Sonys and get another brand? Wonder if Dish is going to try to modify things so Sonys work.
Just to pile on here, I have a Sony KDS60XBR2 1080p input capable TV and it fails Dish's test.
I also have a Sony KDS-R60XBR2 set. I called Sony tech support & was told this set is 1080p 60fps and HDMI is 1.3.
I get the same fu**ed up message telling me my TV is NOT compatible. I will LEAVE Dish as soon as Direct has a 1080p plan that works for me. Dish really Fuc**d up by this 24 fps crap!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Some rube told me I should buy another set if I want the "good" picture. After soending $3000 last year to get a FULL 1080 set now I can't even watch that sorry as* movie on 501. BTW: I got that movie from Netflix and it sucked anyway.
I also have a Sony KDS-R60XBR2 set. I called Sony tech support & was told this set is 1080p 60fps and HDMI is 1.3.
I get the same fu**ed up message telling me my TV is NOT compatible. I will LEAVE Dish as soon as Direct has a 1080p plan that works for me. Dish really Fuc**d up by this 24 fps crap!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Some rube told me I should buy another set if I want the "good" picture. After soending $3000 last year to get a FULL 1080 set now I can't even watch that sorry as* movie on 501. BTW: I got that movie from Netflix and it sucked anyway.
Television is normally 60 fields (odd/even 1/2 frames per send) film is 24 analog frames per second. Digital video is 30 frames per second. In the breakdown of 1920/1080 for HDTV the 3 standards are 1920:1080 60i, 1920:1080 30p and 1920:1080 24p. Dish normally outputs 1080i or 720p HD (depending on the broadcast). I haven't checked my wife's 1080p set, but I noticed the on display now says she's been turbo charged and channel 501 shows up. Mine does not as yet.
Wouldn't it have been easier just to offer 1080p rather then 1080p/24? I realize 1080p/24 is the top of the heap but all I am reading is failure after failure. Am I really missing something if its not 24? That along with I guess you have to rent the movie just to do the test anyway truly burns me. I won't bite on it. DirecTv's rollout sometime at the end of the year for the same feature I hope will learn from this seemingly fiasco.