The PS3 will upscale to 1080P if the system is set to upscale. You will not get 1080p you will get 720P upscaled to 1080P. I find that DVDs movies are better on the upscaled format, but they are not of the quality of Blu Ray.
The Toshiba 46sI412u is already a 1080p LED TV. If you are using this TV with a cable box, you need to do fix the picture quality on the cable box. Some cable boxes will automatically detect the picture quality.
Sony says it requires both a HDTV and a HDMI cable. to quote them: "Copy-protected Blu-ray video discs can only output at 1080p using an HDMI cable connected to a device that is compatible with the HDCP standard. If a device that is not compatible with the HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection) standard is connected to the system using an HDMI cable, video and/or audio cannot be output from the system."
Ads describing features for the PS3 contain the following footnote: Video output in HD requires cables and an HD-compatible display, both sold separately. Full HD 1080p requires an HDMI cable and a 1080p native display with an HDMI input supporting HDCP. Copy-protected Blu-ray video discs can only output at 1080p using an HDMI cable connected to a device that is compatible with the HDCP standard. This means in order to set up your PS3 to play Blue Ray Discs you need a HDTV that gets 1080P and is able to be connected to the PS3 with a HDMI cable, or that the HDTV has an HDMI input and you have used it to connect it to the PS3.
To get your PS3 to output in 720P you will need an HDMI cable and an HDTV. Connect your PS3 to the HDTV using the HDMI cable. After you connect the PS3 to the HDTV go to options and then output setting and choose to output in 720p.
No, only 1080i. 1080p is currently only found on local video sources such as games consoles and computer displays. Broadcasters are currently using only 1080i and 720p as their HD formats.
To change the video output settings from 480i to 1080p on a Magnavox NB500MG1F Blu-ray player, turn on the player and press the "Setup" button on the remote. Navigate to the "Video Setup" menu using the arrow keys, then find the "Video Output" option. Select it and change the resolution to 1080p. Save the changes and exit the setup menu to apply the new settings.
To watch 4K video on a 1080p screen, you can downscale the video resolution to fit the screen size using video player software or hardware that supports this feature. This will reduce the quality of the video but allow you to view it on a lower resolution screen.
To connect a microphone with an XLR output to an amplifier using an XLR to amp cable, simply plug one end of the XLR cable into the microphone and the other end into the amplifier. Make sure both devices are powered on and adjust the volume levels as needed for clear sound output.
Hi, It really depends on your PIP output on the cable box and whether or not the output is HDTV or standard TV. And in some cases, the PIP output will only display non-HDTV channels, depending again, on the box and the cable company. However, IF the cable company says that a HDTV signal is available from the PIP output on the cable box, then it'll probably work. The only way to be sure is to connect a TV and find out. Hope this helps, Cubby
It doesn't have a speedometer cable. The speed is calculated by the transmission computer using it's output speed sensor.
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This is a typical problem when a PS3 is updated or reset for some reason, and the Video Output settings are changed, or you moved it from one monitor to another one and used a different output (e.g., Component Out on one and HDMI on the next).First try and see if you can get a video output on any monitor at all using any type of output. If you can, then you'll need to setup the Video Output to the monitor you're normally going to use it with. If it's still set to the original output setting you had before the problem, then it's either the output itself or the cable itself. You can't go by a "cable missing" message - some systems only sense the connector when it's contacting the output connection, not the cable itself. Never assume the cable is good until you've proven it to work on another system.