This is still happening with strong decoders
below are some of the reasons why you must upgrade only when necessary. If you rush into an upgrade without checking the changelog or bug alert, you can end with an unpleasant experience.
I will implore all and sundry to please only upgrade a decoder when it is absolutely necessary. With every advantage comes a corresponding disadvantage. E.g, power failure during an upgrade, when you load an incompatible software, or when the existing software becomes unstable or buggyĭangers of a needless upgrade of a Decoder’s software You can brick/kill your decoder in a variety of ways. Lastly, a decoder software upgrade could be necessary to revive your dead decoder.if ever you will have a chance to continue enjoying that very service, you will need new software. You may buy a particular FTA/IKS decoder for a specific purpose and that very service got blocked.Do you remember when Qsat used software to disable Dqcam and support for spycam on certain decoders? A software upgrade can also be used to disable a supposedly unneeded feature on a decoder.When you want to activate hidden features on some FTA decoders that also opens paid content, you must get an upgrade to the latest software.Also, if there is a vulnerability in existing software, only new software will be able to fix it.Secondly, to add more features or improve on the existing ones, you may need to upgrade your software.First off, you need to upgrade when new software is available in other to improve the stability, security, or reliability of your decoder.These things can be damned finicky at times. In my own case one time I even lost access to a single channel simply based on a connector issue. It's amazing how even a slightly loose coaxial or HDMI cable as well as dirt and dust on the connectors from virtually any component can impact the picture of a high-definition television signal. Do this before moving on to whether or not there may be a component problem within your television. If you simply cite or claim a faulty cable box with customer service, I'd think they could schedule an appointment to come out and check it.
If none of these things solve the problem, then it may be a component failure from within the tv or cable box.
Turn it off to see if this helps as well.
Check your tv set's manual to see if it has an automatic ambient light brightness adjustment. Refer to your tv's instruction manual to make sure this feature is turned off.Ĥ. Make sure your tv set hasn't gone into a self-test mode. (Sometimes the magnets in such speakers can cause this sort of interference.)ģ. Make sure there are no audio speakers of any kind too close to your tv set. Check to make sure all HDMI and coaxial cables are tightly connected to all components connected (TV, console game, dvd player, cable box, audio system, etc.) to the tv and free of dirt and dust.Ģ. Rule out the simplest things to consider first:ġ.