I cant really give any specifics here, but i just went through the same thing with my 720p set.
It all boiled down to some outright wrong information in the industry, very basic stuff too.
ALL 720p sets advertise themselves as having native res ov 1366x768. This is WRONG for as far as i can tell every set out there! Its actually 1360x768. As soon as I configured a modeline for that, all my problems went away. pixel perfect display in both lmce and kde desktop.
Even the EDID response contains the incorrect 1366x768 resolution.
I would suspect that 1080p sets have the same problem, but it may take some digging to find the exact resolution needed.
Thanks for that. It lead me to investigating incremental modeline changes, which convinced me to try it first on my Vista setup with powerstrip. Reading the powerstrip FAQ's (
http://forums.entechtaiwan.com/index.php?topic=24.0), I found this:
- You must know the resolution your monitor wants, and you must understand that not all resolutions are possible. In particular, note that graphics cards generally do horizontal timings in character clocks of 8 pixels, not individual pixels. Unless you have a ATI X1k, NVidia digital connection, Matrox Parhelia or early Kyro, your desired horizontal resolution should be evenly divisible by 8, and your vertical resolution should be an even number.
So your 1360 will probably also work at 1368, but then you'd be overscanned by 2 pixels .
For me, it seems that I will get no resolution (haha) to my small problem, since my TV will not cooperate with the customization guide (
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1003099&page=2). For now, I used a portion of that guide and limited my screen resolution to 1845x1040. This gives me a well-lined-up bottom & right edge. The left and top edge are still overscanned mildly. To compensate for this, I moved my desktop icons over, and configured the panel so that it's right-justified, and only 97% long. This makes it look like it fits perfectly. Of course, anytime I open a window, it is off the top & left edges of the screen, but then again, may this be the worst thing that happens to me.
After all this was done, I readjusted the Orbiter spacing and offset (Advanced, Advanced, Adjust spacing and offset) to make it fit the new screen.
For those curious, apparently the PS3 & X-Box developers took a note from the TV/film folks and made use of "title safe" and "action safe" areas (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overscan) to compensate for overscan.
Also, for those curious, it is sometimes possible to go into your HDTV's service menu and turn off overscan so that your TV acts more like a computer monitor. This would not be advisable if you still plan to hook up other appliances to your TV. (Of course, all the "secret" tips for getting into my TV's service menu don't work).
Lastly (this one's for your geekyhawkes), according to the MythTV modeline database (see link in first post), this is a standard EDID modeline from an HDTV:
ModeLine "1360x768" 85.50 1360 1424 1536 1792 768 771 778 795 -HSync -VSync
Hope this helps somebody
Bryce