There's No Such Thing as 'Wireless HDMI' 199
An anonymous reader writes "CE Pro magazine interviewed Steve Venuti and Les Chard of HDMI Licensing, LLC to get a preview of all things HDMI at CES. The duo addressed some of the more controversial issues surrounding HDMI, including 'Wireless HDMI' (There's no such thing); Consumer Electronics Control (There will be interoperability); competitor DisplayPort (No traction in CE); and the complications of HDMI ('It is not an HDMI problem. It's a digital issue.')"
"It's a digital issue" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"It's a digital issue" (Score:5, Insightful)
At least not in the US.
http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/digitaltv.html [fcc.gov]
Re:"It's a digital issue" (Score:4, Interesting)
Government Subsidized Media Time-shifting FTW
Re:"It's a digital issue" (Score:4, Informative)
2. Can I use my coupons to purchase any TV converter box?
No. The government will provide a list of coupon-eligible converter boxes and participating retailers here. You may also ask participating retailers whether TV converter boxes in their stores can be purchased with the $40 government coupon.
18. Can coupons be used toward the price of an upgraded converter box (for example, a box that includes a DVR)?
No. Coupons are only valid for eligible converter boxes. The intent of the program is to allow consumers to continue to view TV over-the-air on the same TV they used prior to the transition, not to enable upgrades in technology.
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So how much are the set top boxes to the goverenment? Eh, a 100 million dollars or so. How much is the radio spectrum going to sell for? Eh, up to 20 BILLION. Thats right, B, as in 20 freekin BILLION.
Communism i
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Great! That 20 billion will buy 2 or 3 NASA toilet seats!
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Sometimes I think Douglas Adams died and got the job of writing the storyline for reality
Will still be analog on cable... (Score:2)
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Still, I know about the coupons, they've been broadcasting ads on the TV about the shutoff.
At this point I'm merely waiting for the boxes to be available. I think that relatively few people addicted to their OTA broadcasts are going to be caught unaware.
There will be some idiots that complain, but th
Bah humbug (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Bah humbug (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I don't think HDMI problems are as big of a deal as people make it out to be. Remember the "Internet Bullhorn Effect", which causes people to think problems are bigger than they really are. I have a 50ft HDMI cable between my HD player and my projector and have had zero problems. I also only paid $55 for the cable too.
Re:Bah humbug (Score:5, Interesting)
If the devices aren't compliant, they shouldn't be sold as such. Testing for compliance and certifying devices as compliant would be the logical role of the licensing agency. They shouldn't let people put the HDMI name on something if it doesn't work. As such, it certainly is their fault that these devices don't interoperate properly. And if the standard is so complicated that they can't actually test for compliance, then that's their fault too.
Re:Bah humbug (Score:4, Funny)
That's more than I've ever paid for a cable, but you seem to feel that you got a bargain. I guess you have drunk the Kool-Aid.
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Re:Bah humbug (Score:5, Interesting)
One of my favorite places to order cables, Microbarn, sells 50 foot HDMI cables for $26.99, qty one. Cheaper if you're buying a bunch. The main cost in HDMI cables is the connectors, (a 6 foot HDMI cable at Microbarn is $6, or only $4 for nickel plated connectors), partly due to licensing costs, but wire is cheap.
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Your strawman: "you think copper wiring is cheap"
I think you need to lay off the crack yourself, it's apparently affecting your reading comprehension skills.
If not Cu, then what metal? (Score:3, Insightful)
Your strawman: "you think copper wiring is cheap"
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Hint, "wiring" != "wire". And neither equal "cable".
24awg copper wire goes for about 1.25 to 1.5 cents per foot per conductor; I'll grant you that's about three times the commodity price for bulk copper, but if I can buy 6 feet of HDMI cable (19 conductors) for less than the price of a Happy Meal, (plus $2 each for the connectors) I don't regard it as expensive.
Your economic situation may vary.
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I've paid $30 for the same type of cable in the 8-10' range. (and have seen the same going for over $100 with gold plated contacts, etc)
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Probably because you've never needed a 15m cable.
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http://www.bluejeanscable.com/ [bluejeanscable.com]
Re:Bah humbug (Score:5, Interesting)
1.My first attempt at purchasing an HDTV LCD (Westinghouse) drove me nuts because even if it was advertised as HDMI, it would not pass sound. A week later it died, so I returned it.
2. My second and third attempts (Magnavox and Memorex, both 19") worked fine with our two Xbox 360s and our HDMI upscaling DVD players.
3. I swapped the 19" Memorex for a 32" Olevia. It worked fine with the HDMI upscaling DVD players but the Xbox 360s could not get a secure link. That TV is still with us, with the 360 connected to it with component cables, my son doesn't mind. After very little research I found dozens of documented cases of people that couldn't get the 360 to connect to that specific 32" Olevia model. Olevia TVs have a USB port for firmware updates, but to date there is no firmware update for that specific model.
4. I swapped the 19" Magnavox with a 37" Olevia, which has dual inputs for everything. Both the 360 and the HDMI upscaling DVD players connected at the same (same HDMI cables that failed with the 32" Olevia) and everything works beautifully.
5. I also noticed a separate issue with the upscaling DVD players that we were using (Philips, we got them for about $55 at Target right before Xmas). Whenever we switched inputs and tried to go back to that HDMI channel, it would not recognize the link and forced us to restart the DVD player. The 360 never had that issue with the five TVs we have tried to date.
To add insult to injury, those cables are expensive if you buy them at retail. A friend just picked an upscaling DVD player with HDMI at Walmart last night for less than $40, then almost flipped when he saw that the cable would cost almost the same.
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Anyone paying $40 for a fun of the mill HDMI cable is nuts. http://www.microbarn.com/details.aspx?rid=102015 [microbarn.com]
Cheers.
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Or just ignorant. If you're not used to shopping on the internet, your only knowledge of this stuff is likely from walmart, best buy, sears, and their ilk. Small HiFi stores that I've seen tend to price about the same.
Perhaps, after spending $1K and up on a HDTV, DVD player of some ilk, etc... Maybe a $40 cable just doesn't register anymore.
50 feet? (Score:2, Flamebait)
So where the fuck did you buy your 50 foot cable?
http://www.bluejeanscable.com/articles/how-long-can-hdmi-run.htm [bluejeanscable.com]
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The wires are thicker, the bundle is 1cm in diameter, the wires in the cable are a larger gauge than that of shorter cable. It's not wimpy stuff.
Re:Bah humbug (Score:5, Informative)
Here's the problem. When you go long, the cable diameter increases as the wire size increases. My cable is 1/2" in diameter. It doesn't bend well, and you can't do much of a bend by the connector due to stresses. This makes it a bitch to plug in to the set.
HDMI sucks. Pro gear doesn't use it, it uses a HD version of SDI which only uses coax cables and has a MUCH longer distance capability without repeaters. Love your HDMI all you want. I hate it with a passion.
I want optical. Optical is future proof and doesn't have a distance issue (within reason.) It uses standard connectors which are MUCH easier to terminate than they used to be. It isn't reasonable to terminate your own HDMI cables in any case, so concerns about termination are moot. Prebuilt optical cables over a certain length are less expensive than HDMI too. Thinner, better capacity, etc.
The HDMI folks can take their spec and shove it. Idiots.
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Cheers to you man, looks like you've run into all the same issues I have over the last few years. That's why we standardized on SDI here at work. Optical cabling is great, we do all of our long range distro with it breaking out to SDI at both ends.
In short, HDMI sucks, the cables die easy, they come out easy, and all the weird DRM screws with everything in the home although I don't have that problem in the HD video production world. /p.
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In contrast, look at network cable. Twinax, cat3, cat5, cat5e, cat6, shielded and unshielded, etc. etc. Each time there is a speed / technology upgrade, they usually need to upgrade the wire spec. Why do you think cable companies and telco companies are upgrading all their systems to optical? Oh yeah - it's because they are actually downgr
Re:Bah humbug (Score:4, Informative)
Consider yourself one of the lucky ones. I have had trouble with every HDMI setup I have ever touched and 100% of the problems without a single exception have been with the HDCP handshake. It hasn't seemed to matter if it's low end, high end, old, or new gear it simply doesn't work reliably 100% of the time and therein lies the real problem.
You know, while the HDMI people were ripping off the DVI standard to make some extra money they should have done something innovative to improve upon it. The physical connector of HDMI is worse than DVI, the audio channel is very limited in the bitstreams it can transport, and the data channel is a complete and total joke. On top of this they didn't bother to make HDCP any more robust than it was with DVI, leaving everyone with a horribly broken "standard" to adhere to. To add insult to it, they keep changing the thing because they couldn't get it right to begin with.
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Which means if you want to re-watch something you recorded, say 6 years ago, you may not be able to. Other then the DRM, HDMI is pretty nice.
Re:Bah humbug (Score:5, Informative)
My set-top box is an older one, so I used an expensive SCART cable to route the vid to the TV. This provides a nice enough image, although some programs appear to be a bit pixelated. This was already the case on my 29" CRT though. The image quality however, is very nice. All audio runs through my receiver, this includes the Set-top box.
Then I connected my Wii and my DVD player to my receiver using component video, which is ample for support of 720p (or in the case of both devices, the 480p they provide). Now the image quality is still very nice, and the sound also gets routed (optical from DVD, stereo-jacks-to-Dolby-PLII for the Wii) through my trusty receiver.
As far as the Laptop is concerned, I connect that with a standard issue VGA cable to the VGA input connector on the back. The TV gets seen by the system, and images are crisp and clear at 1366x768 resolution. Possibly, my laptop gives the best image quality using that connection. Cable costs 5 Euros at the local HW store. Sound gets (again) routed through my trusty receiver.
You can tell me that none of this is a "true HD" setup because I "should be using HDMI with an HD DVD player at 1080p", but in the mean time I'm watching TV and playing games and movies on a nice size screen.
What I'm trying to say with all of this is that HDMI doesn't even need to enter the picture if you want a flat screen and a DVD player. 25 Dollar component-to-component cables will do you fine on the back of a normal DVD player. I promise.
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What's a "digital issue?" There were none with CDs (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't remember any "modulation issues" when FM radio was introduced. You just bought the damn radio and it worked, except the sound was better than AM.
I don't remember any "magnetic issues" when cassettes were introduced. You just bought the damn cassette player and it worked, except the sound wasn't quite as good as LPs... but the cassettes were compact and there weren't any ticks, pops, or scratches.
And for that matter I don't remember any "digital issues" when CDs were introduced. You just bought the damn CD player and it worked, except that the sound was better then on cassettes. (And for 98% of all ears on 98% of all recordings in 98% of all real-world consumer situations, it was much better than LPs, too).
If the customer is using HDMI and having "issues," then they're HDMI issues.
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Otherwise... replace that 22 year old TV already! Go to AVSForum and research the models you are interested in. If there are problems... they are probably uncovered already.
I have several random HDMI gadgets and they all work fine. Which isn't proof of anything... b
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Running a high definition, somewhat decompressed video stream over 2.4Ghz in a real world situation would run into lots of noise problems, assuming it doesn't stomp over any other systems in the area, like the rocketfish, your 802.11n network, etc...
5Ghz would be better, but companies seem to hate it.
At this point I think it's too bad that they haven't come up with a gigabit fib
terrible connector (Score:5, Insightful)
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Still, would have been nice if it had been done over CAT6 (10Gb/s). 1080p is only about 3Gbps right? More compact, more secure connector, cheaper wire, and field-crimpable.
Re:terrible connector (Score:4, Funny)
nice connector (Score:2)
what it is (Score:5, Interesting)
Would it be too much trouble for the submitter to explain what the acronym HDMI stands for, or at least to link [wikipedia.org] to the WP article? Even after reading the WP article, I don't really know much about it.
Since it's a device for imposing DRM, there's presumably some mechanism for forcing the user to buy and use it. What is the mechanism? What types of equipment require it? The closest the WP article comes to discussing it seems to be this: "Both introduced in 2006, Blu-ray Disc and HD DVD offer new high-fidelity audio features that require HDMI for best results." Well, I'm still in the dark. What does "best results" mean? What are your results like if you don't use it?
Another thing I don't understand is how they think this kind of hardware-based DRM can work. All it takes is one hardware hacker to figure out how to tap in to some unencrypted signals, e.g., by connecting onto circuit boards. Once there's a single device that can be hacked by a publicly known procedure, every DRM'd movie out there can be transcoded into a non-DRM'd format.
One interesting sentence from the WP article: "PCs with hardware HDMI output may require software support from Operating Systems such as Windows Vista." So does this mean that you can't use the technology on a Mac, for example? I'm also curious whether any manufacturers are actually making mobos or video cards with hdmi connectors on them.
And how does this fit in with the apparently overwhelming recent trend away from DRM in music? Is it really believable that movies will go the other way?
Re:what it is (Score:5, Informative)
Movies have been copy protected for a long time. VHS had Macrovision, DVD had CSS and HD formats have AACS. They've all been broken though.
HDMI's copy protection has been broken, it's actually the weak point in the chain, HDCP strippers are available. and the encryption is much simpler than what the HD movies have.
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Between HDMI, Bluray, and HD-DVD, consumers have gotten the shaft. The only use for HDMI is to go from your computer to your TV (which is about the only way to get quality out of the HDMI). If I recall correct, HDMI stands
Re:what it is (Score:5, Informative)
HDMI is only a link-level protocol, electrical, cable and plug/jack specification much like 100BaseTX. HDCP is the actual DRM introduced along with HDMI and it has been adopted by both DVI and DisplayPort.
HDCP (be it over HDMI, DVI or DisplayPort) is only required for playing back DRM-infested media at full resolution on DRM-infested OSes like Vista.
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Or for playing it on any HD-DVD/Blu-ray player and HD TV for a disc that stipulates that it requires it. The studios have promised not to switch on that requirement on discs they release until 2009, but that's hardly iron-clad.
Incidentally, Vista only requires HDCP because it was that or not be able to play "DRM-infested" media at full resolution. While it woul
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That is way too many acronyms.
Re: what it is (Score:2)
HDCP (be it over HDMI, DVI or DisplayPort) is only required for playing back DRM-infested media at full resolution on DRM-infested OSes like Vista.
Is that really true? As far as I know, HDCP is at the very least a required part of the HDMI specification, so devices need to implement it in order to be HDMI-certified. What I don't know is whether or not they use it by default, or even whether it's possible to turn it off.
Since all devices need to implement HDCP anyway, I wouldn't be at all surprised if the use of it is mandatory as well. Even if it isn't mandatory, it wouldn't surprise me if most/many devices simply won't work if its peer on the link
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You ought to be old enough to have read previous discussions about HDMI and DRM and not too old like from the era of valve amplifiers.
Just curious
Re:what it is (Score:5, Informative)
The HDCP DRM functions by way of a system called the image constraint token. You can plug an HD-DVD or blu-ray player into a tv via analog component (RGB), but the manufacturers of those discs have the ability to activate the image constraint system on the disc if they wish. Unless the player reports that it's connected via HDMI (and thus has the ability to encrypt the signal), the output resolution on the video is reduced to 1/4th the original (960x540 vs. 1920x1080). As far as I know, no disc currently shipping implements the constraint token, and the studios stated that they planned to hold off on activating it until 2009.
In the computer world, the OS as well as your computer hardware has to support the system if you want to playback video that requires HDCP encryption for full resolution. Many video card manufacturers are currently shipping cards with DVI that has HDCP capability, but you'll need Vista to enable it as far as I know. You'll also need a monitor or television with HDCP support. This usually means purchasing a monitor with HDMI inputs, but there are many that use DVI and support HDCP over DVI. One manufacturer I know of, ASUS, is currently shipping a mainboard based on the NForce chipset that has an HDMI output that actually combines the onboard video and audio into the single cable, but for everyone else you'll generally have to run the audio over coaxial or optical digital and the video over HDCP-eqipped DVI or an HDMI connection that isn't transmitting audio.
The comical part, of course, is that they've spent so much time locking down the video stream when it's far more likely that people will crack all of the DRM at the disc level. HD-DVD has already been mostly compromised, and Blu-Ray discs have an extra level of DRM that hasn't yet been implemented but is theoretically supported in all Blu-ray player. Of course, I'm sure it will be just as foolproof as all the other DRM systems...
At the end of the day, the principle complaint that people have with HDMI is that the need to handshake for encryption sometimes gets screwed up, especially when switching inputs. So, for example, most people who plug their PS3 straight into the TV do fine, but if you plug it into an audio receiver and plug the receiver into the TV, people may experience a blank screen when they switch back to the PS3 input because the system is convinced that the link has been broken. In this situation, you have to go unplug and replug the HDMI cable to re-establish the link and get your video signal back. Highly annoying, but nothing like the ridiculous "We're closing our online video store so your purchases are now worthless because they can no longer be authenticated." In my opinion, the benefits of the single cable digital audio+video outweigh the minor and occasional annoyance, although it sucks that the annoyance only exists because of the asinine requirement for DRM on the cable.
So they plan to spring the trap in 2009? (Score:3, Interesting)
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The people that get burned are folks who bought HDTVs before HDCP/HDMI had hit the market; they've got connections fully capable of feeding 1080p signals in, but they'll be screwed when the image constraint tokens starts getting activated.
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http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/?p=1004 [freedom-to-tinker.com]
http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/?p=1005 [freedom-to-tinker.com]
http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/?p=1006 [freedom-to-tinker.com]
http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/?p=1007 [freedom-to-tinker.com]
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They don't do a per session check or even a periodic check. It appears they continually check, and I must have a loose connection between TIVO-Amp-TV so I get a black screen with warning message IN THE MIDDLE OF WATCHING STUFF. and it makes me angry. I touch the cords and restart the amp and it goes away. Sometimes you just power the amp and it goes away.
This makes me want to find some solution to strip HDCP from the stream so I don't have
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YPbPr is as follows: Y=luma, Pb=different between blue and luma, and Pr is difference between red and luma.
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Obviously, audio isn't transmitted over this link, and it isn't compatible with a VGA-only card.
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P6NGM-FIH [newegg.com]
There are nVidia and ATI cards with HDMI outputs or adapters as well. I have seen nVidia 8600's with them on the web, as well as 7600's, and ATI X1600's I think... you have to search a little but you can find
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It *IS* an HDMI problem. (Score:2)
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And we all know average consumers lack the knowledge or technical resources to copy the stuff (particularly from VGA/DVI/HDMI sources) in the first place and for pirates, it is always a simple matter of "break once, copy everywhere" that only delays things by a few hours or da
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In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)
10.2Gbps Wireless? (Score:4, Interesting)
PulseLINK has wireless HDMI (shhhh dont tell TFAA) (Score:2)
Re:PulseLINK has wireless HDMI (shhhh dont tell TF (Score:3, Informative)
But I guess it's better than nothing, where the rest of the system is HDMI and wireless is required, and evidently it will interop with the other HDMI links in the signal path. And later, when when someone uses H.264 to compress only 20-30x, they'll
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If you put the decompressor in the set, what's the problem? You don't have anywhere near 10.2 Gbps of actual information coming into anyone's house via any method at the moment.*
*Ok, except maybe people with some kind of IMAX sized spools coming in by forklift. But I don't know many houses that are equipped to handle that kind of equipment.
BTW, OTA digital broadcast ranges from SD, all the wa
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But I have an HDMI TV, and there's no equipment with an HDMI input. So I don't really want a new TV with the decompressor in the set. So given what we've actually got is a setup that could use exactly what I described.
And OTA 1080p with lossy pixels isn't HDMI.
HDMI Licensing, LLC? (Score:3, Interesting)
This is perhaps unrelated to the original purpose of the thread, but HDMI Licensing, LLC? So there's a whole company whose purpose is just to license the HDMI Connector? Well, they're not doing a good job, because it's all but impossible to find HDMI to HDMI connectors at most stores.
More than that, has anyone heard of an RCA Cable Licensing LLC? A cursory search of the internet doesn't yield any attempts by RCA to control dissemination of the now ubiquitous cable. Perhaps HDMI doesn't need a whole company....
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HDMI is a proprietary plug, whereas the RCA, aka phono, plug wasn't (isn't). They purposely made it a closed, proprietary format so that they could charge for licensing, etc. It's really an end game for the DRM goals that large corporations are hoping allow them to totally lock content, IMHO. Crack your player? Cool, but the TV won't display the video because your HDMI signal doesn't include the "flag", which says you paid for the content. Have a consumer modulator (e.g. you can see a camera over the fr
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Try Microbarn [microbarn.com], unless you absolutely hate ordering online. I have no connection with them beyond being an occasional (and satisfied) customer. Good prices for all things cable, IMHO. (They sell other stuff too, but so far I've only bought cables from them.)
No, the problem *IS* HDMI (Score:3, Informative)
HD-SDI lets you have 100m runs over standard 75ohm cable, terminated in standard BNC connectors.
Compared to HDMI or DVI which can't be terminated, so it can't be run through walls, and running it through a wall would probably exceed the maximum run anyway. The only way to make a long DVI run is to use expensive extenders [gefen.com] that require power on either side. And even then
If the guys who designed HDMI had copied HD-SDI instead, there would be no home theater installation issues.
dom
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Yeah, like that's gonna show up in consumer electronics equipment^Wtoys.
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
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Bluray and HD-DVD both offer high resolution audio soundtracks-- imagine a CD, uncompressed, in 7.1 channels. On some players, you can hook them up with 3 pairs of RCA cables. On the PS3, and lower end HD-DVD players, the necessary analogue jacks are not present-- only hdmi.
Yes, you can use SPDIF, but it lacks the bandwidth for anything more complex than DTS/Dolby Digital.
It's all laid out.....read it (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:CES is the new LinuxWorld (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't know if you meant that as sarcasm, but for at least 15 years, I've always waited until after the January CES to make any large tech purchases... Not because I always want the cutting edge (in fact, I usually avoid most of the newest of the new at the CES), but because it drives the price of the last year's toys over a cliff.
Or looked at a bit more cynically - It happens after the holiday season for a reason.
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