HDMI and What it Will Do for You
CrzyP writes "AnandTech has whipped up a short but informative article on the new HDMI digital audio/video connection standard that is said to be the successor of DVI. Take a look at what this new standard is all about and what we can expect from it in the future!"
HDMI and What it Will Do for You
From what I read in the article, it will help the media companies to prevent fair use of the signal. Other than bundling audio, how will really benefit the consumer?
Trolling is a art,
I'll save you the time of reading TFA:
It's line-compatible DVI with a pair of lines for digital audio, and a slimmer connector.
It can carry 5gbps over copper, more than enough for 1080p video and 8 192khz audio channels.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
I read this article this morning and it really pissed me off (especially how rabidly positive the author was about the connector) -- now PC users will have to contend with all the DRM nonsense that the people who bought new HDTVs recently will soon be exposed to.
It brought to mind some questions though:
This is as big a problem as, if not bigger than, CSS.
C
The Sun is proof that we can't even do fire properly.
I have a new LCD TV with HDMI input and HDCP support.
It also comes with schematics (on CD).
I studied the schematics and was astonished by what I found: the HDMI digital input is terminated at a special purpose chip that deserializes and deframes the data, decrypts the HDCP, and converts the R, G and B to ANALOG!
So on the output of this chip there is a normal RGB (plus sync) signal. This is fed to the switching matrix (where it is combined with all other inputs the TV supports) and then this analog RGB signal is again digitized and fed to the scaler that scales it up or down to drive the LCD panel.
This amazes me for two reasons:
1. I would have expected that the digital DVI or HDMI signal would go directly to the scaler without first being converted to analog and then back to digital. What point is there in using a digital input, this way?
2. It provides an accessible and decrypted version of the HDCP-protected stream. Assuming this special-purpose chip is commercially available, it will be trivial to build a HDCP-circumventing box, just like the anti-Macrovision boxes...