, 16:9 formats shown in blue.
Broadcasts In the
United States, 1080p over-the-air broadcasts are currently available in select stations in some cities in the US via ATSC 3.0 multiplex stations where as ATSC 3.0 is currently rolling out throughout the U.S. The majority of the stations that broadcast at 1080p are CBS and NBC stations and affiliates. All other stations do not broadcast at 1080p and usually broadcast at 720p60 (including when simulcasting in ATSC 3.0) or 1080i60 (outside of ATSC 3.0) encoded with MPEG-2. There is also technical restrictions with ATSC 3.0 multiplex stations that prevent stations from airing at 1080p. While converting to ATSC 3.0 is voluntary by TV Stations, there is no word when any of the major networks will consider airing at 1080p in the foreseeable future on a national scale, although they are required to broadcast ATSC signals for at least five years thereafter. However, satellite services (e.g.,
DirecTV, XstreamHD and
Dish Network) use the 1080p/24-30 format with MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 encoding for
pay-per-view movies that are downloaded in advance via satellite or on-demand via broadband. At this time, no pay service channel such as USA, HDNET, etc. nor premium movie channel such as HBO, etc., stream their services live to their distributors (
MVPD) in this format because many MVPDs, especially DBS and cable, do not have sufficient bandwidth to provide the format streaming live to their subscribers without negatively impacting their current services. For material that originates from a progressive scanned 24 frame/s source (such as film),
MPEG-2 lets the video be coded as 1080p24, irrespective of the final output format. These progressively-coded frames are tagged with metadata (literally, fields of the PICTURE header) instructing a decoder how to perform a
3:2 pulldown to interlace them. While the formal output of the MPEG-2 decoding process from such stations is 1080i60, the actual content is coded as 1080p24 and can be viewed as such (using a process known as
inverse telecine) since no information is lost even when the broadcaster performs the 3:2 pulldown. In June 2016, German television stations began broadcasting 1080p50 high-definition video on eight channels via the
HEVC-encoded DVB-T2 protocol. A total of 40 channels were available on March 29, 2017 (Phase 1). Further changes took place on November 8, 2017 (Phase 2a), April 25, 2018 (Phase 2b), September 26, 2018 (Phase 3a-I), October 24, 2018 (Phase 3a-II), November 8, 2018 (Phase 3a-III), November 28, 2018 (Phase 3a-IV), December 5, 2018 (Phase 3a-V), March 13, 2019 (Phase 3b-I), April 3, 2019 (Phase 3b-II), May 22, 2019 (Phase 3b-III) and August 29, 2019 (Phase 3b-IV).
Blu-ray Disc Blu-ray Discs are able to hold 1080p HD content, and most movies released on
Blu-ray Disc produce a full 1080p HD picture when the player is connected to a 1080p
HDTV via an
HDMI cable. The Blu-ray Disc video specification allows encoding of 1080p23.976, 1080p24, 1080i50, and 1080i59.94. Generally this type of video runs at 30 to 40 megabits per second, compared to the 3.5 megabits per second for conventional standard definition broadcasts.
Smartphones Smartphones with 1080p Full HD display have been available on the market since 2012. As of 2014, it is the standard for mid-range to high-end smartphones, with many flagship devices using even higher resolutions, such as
Quad HD (1440p) or
Ultra HD (2160p).
Internet content Several websites, including YouTube, allow videos to be uploaded in the 1080p format. YouTube streams 1080p content at approximately 4 megabits per second compared to Blu-ray's 30 to 40 megabits per second.
Digital distribution services like
Hulu and
HBO Max also deliver 1080p content, such as movies available on Blu-ray Disc or from broadcast sources. This can include distribution services like peer-to-peer websites and public or private tracking networks.
Netflix has been offering high quality 1080p content in the US and other countries through select internet providers since 2013.
Consumer televisions and projectors As of 2012, most consumer televisions being sold provide 1080p inputs, mainly via
HDMI, and support full high-definition resolutions. 1080p resolution is available in all types of television, including
plasma,
LCD,
DLP front and rear projection and
LCD projection. For displaying film-based 1080i60 signals, a scheme called 3:2 pulldown reversal (
reverse telecine) is beginning to appear in some newer 1080p displays, which can produce a true 1080p quality image from film-based 1080i60 programs. Similarly, 25fps content broadcast at 1080i50 may be deinterlaced to 1080p content with no loss of quality or resolution. AV equipment manufacturers have adopted the term
Full HD to mean a set can display all available HD resolutions up to 1080p. The term is misleading, however, because it does not guarantee the set is capable of rendering digital video at all frame rates encoded in source files with 1920 X 1080 pixel resolution. Most notably, a "Full HD" set is not guaranteed to support the 1080p24 format, leading to
consumer confusion.
DigitalEurope (formerly EICTA) maintains the
HD ready 1080p logo program that requires the certified TV sets to support 1080p24, 1080p50, and 1080p60, without
overscan/underscan and picture distortion.
Computer monitors Most widescreen
cathode-ray tube (CRT) and
liquid-crystal display (LCD) monitors can
natively display 1080p content. For example, widescreen
WUXGA monitors support 1920 × 1200 resolution, which can display a pixel for pixel reproduction of the 1080p (1920 × 1080) format. Additionally, many 23, 24, and widescreen LCD monitors use 1920 × 1200 as their native resolution; 30 inch displays can display beyond 1080p at up to 2560 × 1600 (
1600p). Many 27" monitors have native resolutions of 2560 × 1440 and hence operate at
1440p.
Laptops Sony has their first and formerly
Vaio 1080p laptop, VPCCB17FG, in 2011, and since
Asus also has their first
4K laptop GL502 which was formerly branded
Republic of Gamers in 2017, 1080p has also become the nowadays lowest standard for laptops.
Video game consoles While Microsoft's original
Xbox, launched as part of the
sixth generation of video game consoles in 2001, could support a 1080i output in limited circumstances, support for 1080p began with the launch of the
seventh generation of home video game consoles in 2005. Both the
Xbox 360 and
PlayStation 3 were capable of outputting at 1080p, with only the
Wii unable to support the resolution. All home video game consoles launched as part of the
eighth generation, which began in 2012 with the launch of the
Wii U, were capable of 1080p outputs. Mid-generation hardware revisions and new models introduced by
Sony and
Microsoft to their respective
PlayStation 4 and
Xbox One consoles added the capability of outputting at
4K UHD — well beyond 1080p. Moreover, this mid-generational improvement in computing power also represented a leap in the ability of video game consoles to render gaming content at a 1080p resolution or higher, rather than relying on
upscaling. As of 2024, however, neither console yet supports outputting the standard and PlayStation 5 packaging no longer advertises the feature. The
Nintendo Switch console displays in resolutions up to 1080p when docked, while the successor console,
Nintendo Switch 2, displays in 1080p when undocked, and up to 4K when docked.
Cameras Many camerasprofessional and consumer still, action and video cameras, including
DSLR camerasand other devices with built-in cameras such as laptops,
smartphones and tablet computers, can capture 1080p24, 1080p25, 1080p30 or 1080p60 video, often encoding it in
progressive segmented frame format. == See also ==