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Yep. That's my ONLY complaint about this beauty. What you need to do is count the number of UHD & HDR inputs you will be using. Purchase a splitter/switch (some offer a small output amp to keep the signal up) that features as many HDMI 2.0 inputs as you need. Then you select whichever of those to watch at the moment. It's the only simple way to overcome Vizio's "miss" when they didn't engineer each HDMI to be 2.0b. BTW There is a simpler way to deal with it if you have a 4K UHD A/V Receiver: Just connect all of your inputs to the rear of the receiver, then connect the output to your TV! My Denon doesn't just "pass through" the video signal (which would work just fine too) in upgrades the signal quality (resolution) to "near 4K". It even upconverts 480P signals to 1080, then a different process engine gets to work on the 1080 signal to bring it as close to 4K as possible. Your TV will still attempt to improve the video signal to 4K. This is a well made display with an incredible picture. Just be sure to use C-NET's values for calibrating the picture once you have completed setup. I'm confident you will love it for years to come. ;-)
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