That's probably better suited as a question to @kaznelson, but I'm intrigued by the resolution of his snapshot. It's definitely 1080x1440 on my end, not 1080x1429. :?
Code:
[root@(none) .niluje]# fbgrab -v snap.png
Fixed framebuffer info:
id: "mxc_epdc_fb"
start of fb mem: 0x75000000
length of fb mem: 6684672
type: packed pixels
interleave for interleaved planes: 0
visual: true color
hw panning x step: 1
hw panning y step: 1
hw panning y wrap: 0
line length: 2176 bytes (1088 pixels)
start of mmio: 0
length of mmio: 0
accel chip/card: 0
Variable framebuffer info:
visible resolution: 1080x1440
virtual resolution: 1088x3072
offset from virtual to visible resolution: 0x0
bits per pixel: 16
grayscale: false
red: bitfield offset: 11, bitfield length: 5, MSB is right: no
green: bitfield offset: 5, bitfield length: 6, MSB is right: no
blue: bitfield offset: 0, bitfield length: 5, MSB is right: no
alpha: bitfield offset: 0, bitfield length: 0, MSB is right: no
pixel format: standard
activate: 0
height: -1 mm
width: -1 mm
obsolete accel_flags: 0
pixel clock: 0 ps
time from sync to picture (left_margin): 0 pixclocks
time from picture to sync (right_margin): 0 pixclocks
time from sync to picture (upper_margin): 0 pixclocks
lower_margin: 0 pixclocks
length of horizontal sync: 0 pixclocks
length of vertical sync: 0 pixclocks
sync: undefined!
vmode: non interlaced
rotate: 1
FBGrab info:
Blue: 0, Green: 0, Red: 1, Alpha: 0
Resolution: 1080x1440 @ depth 16
Converting image from 16bpp
Now writing PNG file (compression -1)