Does your tv accept a 1080p /24 signal?
I just found out that my tv will accept 1080p/60fps but not 24fps. Does this mean that I will not be able to view the downloaded movie in its native format(The Bucket List-1080p) from Directv?
Thanks.
It is my understanding that the Broadcom chip will only do the 1080p/24.
The 1080p/24 is another number in the long list that electronics manufactures have skirted around, when all 1080p should support atleast it being input.
My tv does not display 24fps, but it does accept it.
Some tv's accept a 24fps input and display it as such. Mine does not display 24fps, but accepts the input. The minimum tv id buy nowadays would at least have to accept the 24fps signal.
When my tv gets sent a 24fps signals, it converts it to 60. Other's tv who wont convert it to something the tv can display, just give the error.
Some tv's accept a 24fps input and display it as such. Mine does not display 24fps, but accepts the input. The minimum tv id buy nowadays would at least have to accept the 24fps signal.
When my tv gets sent a 24fps signals, it converts it to 60. Other's tv who wont convert it to something the tv can display, just give the error.
No HDTV displays at 24. Even movie theaters display at 48. Most plasma and DLP's display at 72 or 96. The new LCD's that display at a whole number cadence generally do so at 120.
I still don't see the 1080 channel, and feel awful stupid. I tried typing it in on my remote, and the receiver just beeps (as in 'invalid channel'). Is this channel available only if you took one of the CE's? I am running that last National Release currectly.
I have 'Native' turned on, and I have the receiver hooked up via HDMI