I've connected a HDTV with HDMI on my Radeon 4670, using the open source ati driver. However there is "overscan" which cuts off a bit of each edge of the screen, about the size of the gnome-panel. How can I fix this so it displays the full resolution?
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I was attempting to solve this problem this afternoon. A Sharp TV would not let me change selection from "stretch" to "dot by dot". It gave me a message:
A solution that served my purposes (not losing part of the screen) was to switch to the lower resolution of 1360 x 768 instead of 1920 x 1080. Since I just wanted to run emacs on the TV, losing some resolution was not a big deal. This is kindof a dumb workaround, but since no-one else seems to mention it, I figured this answer would contribute. |
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The issue was with the TV, not Ubuntu.
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i've just fixed the issue by changing in the property disply modi to 1920x1080 60Hz. it was 59Hz. this solved my problem, without doing with the registry. |
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I Have struggled with this problem for longer than I care to say! This may help if you have a NVidia graphics card, and Ubuntu 14.04.
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Try switching the aspect ratio of your tv by clicking "aspect" button on your controller(tvformat:auto-scan). I connect my dell laptop to a 22" tv and it works. |
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Both right, New TVs are set to allow overscan, so the driver will often do that very overscan that is available when set to a desktop resolution. So, the driver for the video card - might - have an overscan setting to resolve this if lucky, or as Hew found out you might be able to set the TV to display the incoming signal without overscan. Try the video display driver first, then if no luck, try your TV settings. It is best to correct in the driver setting first, instead of setting a fixed display. |
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Fixing HDMI overscan on a Samsung TV I connect my laptop to the HDMI input of my Samsung TV. Due to overscan, The TV annoyingly puts part of the image outside the visible screen, even though the resolution is correctly set to 1080p. Here is a solution:
Your screen goes blank for a second – and mission accomplished: the overscan is disabled. |
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As someone before me wrote: This isn't a software problem. Many TV models behaves differently if the HDMI port input label is set to "PC" or something else. Make sure that your TV knows what's connected to the other end of your HDMI cable On my 47" LG LCD I can set it at Menu->Option->Input Label |
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As the above comments are saying, the problem is most likely due to the TV and not the driver. However, if you have a Sharp Aquos TV, "Dot by Dot" mode might not be available in the menu as Pakman mentioned; I couldn't find an option for enabling "Dot by Dot" mode anywhere. Instead, I solved the problem by discovering that my remote has a dedicated "Wide Mode" button for this setting, which looks kind of like this: |
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I using ubuntu 13.10 and had the same overscan problem using a 32" dynex led tv. Im using a shuttle computer with 3rd gen intel graphics 2500 connected buy hdmi cable. I went into my advanced video settings on my tv and turned off overscan (problem fixed) |
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In my case, activating overscan on the monitor (a Philips 244E) didn't fully solve the problem (the monitor's space was not fully covered). I had to deactivate overscan on the monitor and do it using the AMD catalyst control center |
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I'd suggest checking your graphics card driver software, I know ATI comes with overscan options. In windows there was a program called power strip that I used to fix this on mine with Windows 7. |
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protected by Byte Commander Sep 26 '16 at 22:17
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