Change display resolution to 1080p

I'd like to get my new Mini to output a 1080p signal, as my new Westinghouse LVM37W3 LCD display accepts 1080p. However, 1080p is not a resolution that can be selected in the display control panel -- only 1080i.

Anyone solved this issue already? The best I have come up with is to define a custom resolution with the shareware app Switch ResX, but I'd prefer to just use OSX...

Mac Mini Core Duo, Mac OS X (10.4.6), 1 GB RAM

Posted on May 11, 2006 7:27 AM

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6 replies

May 14, 2006 7:06 AM in response to Al Van Malsen

To those who research this question in the future: The Switch ResX control panel, available as shareware, does a beautiful job at this. With the unregistered version, you can add one additional resolution to the standard set offered by Apple in the "monitors" control panel. If you use the Switch ResX control panel to define the resolution, then restart, you can select the new resoltuion. I had to then restart again for it the settings to work.

For those asking why, wherefore, etc:

The reason I want the monitor to be fed a 1080p signal is that 1080p is its native resolution; all flat panel/ fixed resoltuion displays look best at their native resolution. 1080i requires the display to re-create the progressive scan image, and is near-unreadable as a computer display.

Some might ask, why set to 1080p at all? Why not work in 720p, for example? The answer is that in general 720p is in fact better for me, biven the distance I sit from the display. However, for some applications like Garageband I need more desktop real estate not dedicated to toolbars, menus, etc. Finally I am curious to see how well the mini does at upscaling DVD content relative to the chip in my monitor.

As to whether it is possible via DVI, all I can tell you is that I did it yesterday evening and the display looked awesome. So I'm guessing it is possible.

The seems to be a lot of misunderstanding about the "demands" of 1080p out there. So far my experience has been that the Mini core duo handles the output of 1080p with aplomb, as do the cables, display, etc etc.

May 14, 2006 7:14 AM in response to BigDaddy33

Regarding the post who said that one would need an HDMI converter, in my understanding this would be incorrect prima facie. Firstly, HDMI is essentially just a DVI signal plus sound. Secondly, the output jack of the Mini is a DVI connection. If it didn't have the bandwidth to support 1080p, screwing an adapter on the back side of it is not going to make a difference. As with any pipe, the smallest part is the constraining factor, or bottleneck.

I have to say that so far the advice I have seen in these forums is by and large either not helpful or counter-productive. What happened to the cadre of well-informed Mac addicts I knew and loved so well?

Jul 17, 2006 6:55 PM in response to BigDaddy33

Hi Mac Experts... im new to Mac and I switched to Pc's media center because its CRAP... so I went to the mac store and decided to get a mini and put as much ram as I can... I have a Sharp Aquos 37" LCD TV, and a mac mini Duo core with 2gb ram. I love the look and feel of the mac and i just have this 1 annoying problem...

I have a problem getting the mac to view the tv right on the borders. at this present moment I have about 1.5 black border around the screen... and when I used the overscan feature it turned purplish and the screen is way to big.. that I cant see the launch bar on the bottom and the file setting on the top... is there a utility that can adjust these setings manually?


thanks in advance,
sam

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Change display resolution to 1080p

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