Wow I have done the same thing to the point of actually labelling them V60 on my EPG and I have tons of them. Present count is 45 sports channels with 1280 x 720 60FPS.
How do you identify the 60fps channels? My main tv is 120 hz but I don’t think any iptv or OTA channels support that. For gaming I suppose – which I don’t really do.
In tivimate if you want you can go into the settings and change it to show the resolution of the channels and when you are watching any channel you click the ok button and it will show the res and the fps. Now 120hz has nothing to do with frames per second (FPS) 60 Hz and 120hz are refresh rates so that is how often the picture gets refreshed.
120Hz and 60Hz refer to the refresh rate of a display, measured in Hertz (Hz). A 120Hz display refreshes the image on the screen 120 times per second, while a 60Hz display refreshes the image 60 times per second. The higher refresh rate of 120Hz results in smoother motion and a more responsive feel, especially noticeable when scrolling, gaming, or watching videos with high frame rates.
I have a native 120hz panel and when I watch 50hz(Europe) or 60hz(North America) live tv on Tivimate my TV switches to 100hz and 120hz.
I use AFR so that the frame rate matches hertz frequency used in different regions.
Turned on AFR and not sure I notice a difference with live channels in TiviMate. But that could just be the eyes…
Judge Judy has a Youtube channel.
Your TV has to support it and an HDMI 2.1 or higher cable. Your streaming device itself may also have a setting to enable or disable it, not just the Tivimate app. And most TVs when switching will go black for just a second and then the screen comes back with a small box in the corner that tells you what resolution and refresh rate it’s using at the least. If it doesn’t, your TVs remote should have an information button or something that will pop up that information on screen. I can only speak for the Nvidia Shield, but the device settings and Tivimate settings combined allow you to automatically switch both the resolution and refresh rate. So, depending on the content, my TV will often double the frame rate to 60FPS and upscale to 4K. Sometimes the refresh rate will even go up to 120Hz.
I use 2.0 HDMI cables which are fine for live tv.
2.1 HDMI 48Gbps bandwidth is needed for 4k 120hz found on gaming and 8k 60hz content if you have the hardware and content.
I think it’s called “match frame rate” on the ONN Pro.
Hate to be so off-topic, but I searched here for half an hour and didn’t find anything and I don’t want to start a new thread for this minor question. Okay, I had switched a setting so that my channel lists would sort by most watched first. I had to reset iptv and lost my setting in TiviMate.for this, and for the life of me, going through settings in TIviMate, I can’t find the switch to organize my channel lists by “most watched” priority. Where is that in settings?? I’ll delete this post whether I get an answer or not in 24 hours.
TiViMate does not automatically track and categorize channels based on frequency of viewing. You can create your own categories/groups and load whatever channels you want into the group of your choice.
Unless I’m having a senior moment, I swear I had this switched on. I gave up using favorites because of this. I would go into a group and the most watched channels would be in order at the top. I remember I had to switch something in settings. Wait, I’ll check to see if this setting was in my iptv setup.
Found it in TiviMate settings! It is under appearance>tv guide>channel sorting>most watched
I know about this setting but don’t actually use it as I organise my channels using iptveditor but is a great option.
No such setting in my TiVimate. Under channel sorting you can choose
By order in Playlist
By Name
By date added
By watch time
There isn’t any “Most watched”.
By “watch time” yes
It’s a nice setting because I don’t have to save little-watched channels in “favorites”. Just go to a group and they will be arranged by most frequently used.
Ahhh. So the “By watch time” organizes the playlist by what channels you watch for the longest times. Tx for that. Good to learn something new.