Discussion:
the defined resolution is not supported (2160p) ((4K UHD))
(too old to reply)
jess stone
2014-08-10 13:44:50 UTC
Permalink
I came across some 2160p files and I was surprised the set that I
purchased this early spring a Samsung UN48H6350AFXZA

http://www.samsung.com/us/video/tvs/UN48H6350AFXZA

could not play them when I loaded them up on a flash drive. My
notebook does not play them either so I can't stream them (if that
would make a difference.) So I am curious what kind of tv sets other
then the 25K and up : ) or computer notebooks for that matter that you
all have that allows you to view 2160p from an external source. I do
not want to re-encode or convert to any other format.
Jan B
2014-08-10 13:59:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by jess stone
I came across some 2160p files and I was surprised the set that I
purchased this early spring a Samsung UN48H6350AFXZA
http://www.samsung.com/us/video/tvs/UN48H6350AFXZA
could not play them when I loaded them up on a flash drive. My
notebook does not play them either so I can't stream them (if that
would make a difference.) So I am curious what kind of tv sets other
then the 25K and up : ) or computer notebooks for that matter that you
all have that allows you to view 2160p from an external source. I do
not want to re-encode or convert to any other format.
What model did you get? The UN48H6350AFXZA spec (you linked to) says
it is HD 1920x1080, not UHD.
jess stone
2014-08-10 16:33:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jan B
Post by jess stone
I came across some 2160p files and I was surprised the set that I
purchased this early spring a Samsung UN48H6350AFXZA
http://www.samsung.com/us/video/tvs/UN48H6350AFXZA
could not play them when I loaded them up on a flash drive. My
notebook does not play them either so I can't stream them (if that
would make a difference.) So I am curious what kind of tv sets other
then the 25K and up : ) or computer notebooks for that matter that you
all have that allows you to view 2160p from an external source. I do
not want to re-encode or convert to any other format.
What model did you get? The UN48H6350AFXZA spec (you linked to) says
it is HD 1920x1080, not UHD.
Right. The link does point to the set that I purchased. Newbie here.
At the time of purchase this became the first set that I owned that
wasn't a generic Insignia Best Buy set and I wasn't particularly
looking for UHD. So I guess only UHD sets will play these types of
files? and I do not want to re-encode and I am no longer in the market
for a new set however I will be getting a new notebook when win 9 is
released next year. Would you happen to know what kind of processors/
models handle UHD files?
John McWilliams
2014-08-12 19:32:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by jess stone
Post by Jan B
Post by jess stone
I came across some 2160p files and I was surprised the set that I
purchased this early spring a Samsung UN48H6350AFXZA
http://www.samsung.com/us/video/tvs/UN48H6350AFXZA
could not play them when I loaded them up on a flash drive. My
notebook does not play them either so I can't stream them (if that
would make a difference.) So I am curious what kind of tv sets other
then the 25K and up : ) or computer notebooks for that matter that you
all have that allows you to view 2160p from an external source. I do
not want to re-encode or convert to any other format.
What model did you get? The UN48H6350AFXZA spec (you linked to) says
it is HD 1920x1080, not UHD.
Right. The link does point to the set that I purchased. Newbie here.
At the time of purchase this became the first set that I owned that
wasn't a generic Insignia Best Buy set and I wasn't particularly
looking for UHD. So I guess only UHD sets will play these types of
files? and I do not want to re-encode and I am no longer in the market
for a new set however I will be getting a new notebook when win 9 is
released next year. Would you happen to know what kind of processors/
models handle UHD files?
It's not just the number of pixels that MAY be getting in the way; it
could be the format. Are you sure the container is one Sammy says it can
handle?
jess stone
2014-08-12 20:07:24 UTC
Permalink
On Tue, 12 Aug 2014 12:32:23 -0700, John McWilliams
<***@comcast.net> wrote:

snip
Post by John McWilliams
It's not just the number of pixels that MAY be getting in the way; it
could be the format. Are you sure the container is one Sammy says it can
handle?
Other then the file being an MPEG-4 and designated 2160p I don't know
if there is any other kind of container associated with the file. I do
know that I have been able to plug into the set hi res mp4 files and
they play just fine but none are 2160p.

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