What's the Matter with HDMI?
mrnomas writes with a link to the Audioholics site, which wonders why the HDMI standard is such a mess? The article's author suggests that the format was designed for the benefit of the content-producers and not the consumer. The result is a signal that's hard to route and switch, as well and unnecessarily complicated cable assemblies. They reach back to the DVI standard to see what might be done to make HDMI a little more consumer-friendly, with numerous technical elements woven through the discussion. "DVI lacked a couple of things which the consumer audio/video industry wanted. It was implemented on a variety of HD displays and source devices, but it was confusing for the consumer because of the many variants on the standard and different connector configurations, and it didn't carry audio signals. A consortium to develop and promote a new interface, HDMI, was formed; the idea was to come up with a standard which could be implemented more uniformly, was less confusing, and offered the option of routing audio signals along with video."
...what might be done to make HDMI a little more consumer-friendly?
Drop the DRM.
------ Take away the right to say fuck and you take away the right to say fuck the government.
I always considered HDMI a anti-consumer,DRM laden, proprietary, and expensive USB cord. What's wrong with DVI? It's more compatible and I don't believe it requires any licensing to use in a product. So I ask you again, what is wrong with DVI? Why is everyone so HDMI-centric?
622677120
What we need is an Open Source standard for connecting audio and video devices. That way every piece of gear would have a consistent interface and connections, and it would be easy to configure and understand.
Especially for people without specialized technical expertise.
Three Squirrels
The first thing that needs to be done is to create legislation that makes DRM illegal. This would remove the threat that HDMI poses to other technologies (such as component) and force it to compete on technical merit. Not to mention solve a lot of other consumer issues.
The second thing to be done - obviously - is make a single standard and stick to it; however that requires cooperation among the manufacturers and seems unlikely at best. Still, we can always ask them nicely, and follow up by voting with our wallets.
HDMI has been a nightmare for me. I started out with a hi-def (I thought) component video system, fully capable of 1080p bandwidth-wise and full of switching capabilities I liked and thought could take me quite some distance down the road; then the collusion between manufacturers not to provide full hi-def on component, but only on HDMI, came about, and there went that investment out the window. That system can only do 720p now (I find 1080i to be useless - part of the point was to get RID of flicker) and it lives in my basement. I had to re-buy my theater system, invest in a bunch of new cabling to reproduce signal routing I already had in place that was perfectly adequate, technically speaking... man. That was one irritating evolution.
Also, I have yet to see a single home theater receiver that has a reasonable number of HDMI inputs. HD-DVD. Blue-ray. PS3. a new XBox 360. A computer. A camera. That's six, even if you only have one of each. And you need lots of component, S-Video and composite inputs with up-conversion; as well as standard audio, coaxial digital and optical digital... just because HDMI canwant it to. There are plenty of older tech gadgets out there that could still be very reasonable assets to such a system but need other types of inputs. So far, typically you find 2 or 3 HDMI inputs on a higher end theater system.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
In other news, the Pope reveals he is Catholic, and prominent climatologists describe the sky as "blue".
We commonly get asked, "Whats the difference between HDMI and Component?". Our answer (tongue in cheek) is, "About $20 a foot". I bought a 1080i LCD Sony Bravia HDTV and I got a DVD at the same level. When I got to interconnect cables, I saw $30 for a reasonable set of Monster component cables. The no-brand HDMI 3 foot cable was $90. It's silly if you think about it. OK, supposedly there's a sync difference and the "transmission is faster" for HDMI, but last I checked, component video hasn't had a lag problem in anyone's home theater I've seen. You can send 1080p just fine over component, and not be worried about anything holding your performance back. This is why I laughed at the XBOX360 HDMI only output....please...when will manufacturers figure out that when you limit choices it just pisses people off?
Are all dead to me. That's right, they skipped right past being put "on notice".
Get rid of the DRM, work out a _single_ rational standard for the cables and the disks, and I _might_ be interested in HDTV. Until then, I'll just keep ignoring it and pay attention to the _content_, rather than the presentation.
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There was one sole reason why HDMI was cobbled together, and that's because all sorts of executives were jumping up and down like jibbering idiots about, as they call it, the analogue hole. Yes, we all needed more bandwidth, but that just wasn't the primary reason.
Pop that together with a cable standard that HDMI are bunging more and more stuff down without doing anything, and you've got an unreliable and worthless pile of junk. The article mentions cables of lengths 50 to 75 feet, but it's a sad day when you've got to limit yourself with a shiny new technology to a run length of a few inches. Oh, and get with the program people, wireless is the way things should be heading. Where the hell is this digital home I've been hearing so much about? It's a joke. Yes, there are new HDMI cables in the pipeline, but yet again, they're going to be ridiculously expensive. No thanks.
From TFA:
Listen, and understand. The DRM is out there. It can't be bargained with. It can't be reasoned with. It doesn't feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And it absolutely will not stop, ever, until you are dead.
The HDCP copy protection crap is what causes HDMI devices to have trouble communicating with each other, especially if there is anything between the source and display devices, like an A/V receiver or HDMI switch box.
They are too stupid to realize that pirates aren't going to copy shows and movies by capturing uncompressed frames coming through the cables; they're going to make copies of the discs. But they insist on making the honest customers suffer through the slow cryptographic handshake that occurs any time you switch on an HDMI device or even switch sources on a TV.
---------
There is inferior bacteria on the interior of your posterior.
Since I have an older HDTV with component inputs I've stayed in that world, avoiding HDMI. Boy am I glad I did, it sounds like an interoperability nightmare. I've particularly seen it with the Apple TV, where many people have problems hooking it up via HDMI to various TVs. I've personally had no problem using component and have not seen anyone complain about problems with component on the Apple TV forums. HDMI might be better on paper, but in the real world HDCP (or something) has made HDMI a real frustrating mess for consumers.
Why would you want audio and video in the same cable? Especially for expensive systems where HDMI is common now. Is anyone with a >$1000 display actually using built-in speakers? If so, what's wrong with you? Go get some decent speakers.
There is an alternative: it is called Display Port. Check it out: http://www.gnss.com/tch_display_port.phtml
The simple fact is that the ONLY choice for HD digital video transmission SHOULD have been fiber optic:
1) With two fibers in a cable, there would be more than enough bandwidth for 1080P + digital surround sound. It is future proof.
2) It is fully bidirectional, which can be useful for error correction or detection, or for signal confirmation, or perhaps for two-way audio/video.
3) It can operate at great distance.
4) The cables would be FAR cheaper than the extremely complex and expensive DVI/HDMI cables.
5) With serial transmissions over a single pair, the encoding could be changed at any point in the future for different formats.
Let's look at the author's problems with twisted pairs and what it would mean with optical:
1) Time- not a problem, because it is all serial
2) Resistance: fiber has none
3) Skin effect: fiber has none
4) Capacitance: fiber has none
5) Impedance: fiber has none
6) Crosstalk: fiber has none
7) Inductance: fiber has none
Lets add
8) RFI: fiber has none
9) Signal leak (causing potential interference with OTHER devices): fiber has none
10) Cable thickness: fiber would be 6+ times narrower and easier to route and hide
11) Connector size: perhaps 4 times smaller with fiber? (Think handhelds, laptops, etc)
When I first saw DVI, I thought the designers had gone insane. WHO CARES about analog signals? We already have PLENTY of cable standards for that (VGA, Component, SVideo, Composite)! It looks tremendously complex and overkill to relay a stream of information THAT IS ALREADY being delivered serially over the air, from DVD's, from tuners, from ANY source. Then they "fixed" it with HDMI?? Right- make the connector IMPOSSIBLE for anyone to ever make their own or repair, add audio, and ignore all other issues (oh, and the cable costs are even more expensive than the already expensive DVI). Then to have to throw "dual link" into the mess because the "standard" set of over a dozen wires doesn't have enough bandwidth...
About the only negative with fiber is that you can't kink the cable and expect it to survive. I say "small price to pay". Oh well, maybe the next revision they will wake up??
The solution for all these problems already exists. It's called the Serial Digital Interface. It's simple, cheap, and works over a single high-quality coax cable. It's used in professional video applications like television production and broadcasting. It doesn't do DRM, which I consider a feature. If you need to make a cable, just buy some Belden 1694A and a pair of 75-ohm BNC connectors.
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
This reminds me of SDI which could be a technically nice alternative to HDMI. Unfortunately,
SDI and HD-SDI are currently only available in professional video equipment; various licensing agreements, restricting the use of unencrypted digital interfaces to professional equipment, prohibit their use in consumer equipment.I was hoping the industries would start to realize that there's no sharp line between consumers and professionals.
Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
Don't buy anything with DRM on it. Let their accountants do your talking.
Don't hack anything with DRM on it. Don't help other people watch their crap for free.
Don't watch anything with DRM on it. Make them afraid of losing mind share.
Instead: Watch DRM wither and die.
Linux Distributions? They got more and more consumer friendly with every incarnation. When I think back to the mid-90s distris...
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Because you have to buy it. Whether you (can) listen to it or watch it doesn't matter.
You have to see the point of the content industry and why they call it "consumer" this or "consumer" that. Because that's what you are to them: A consumer. Not a customer, you're a consumer. Personally, I find that term rather insulting, since it doesn't imply that I'm a partner in business but just some nuisance you have to endure to get his money.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
...where it just used to be annoying. I know engineers and scientists and other smart folks who have avoided HDTV so far because of all the nonsense. It's bullshit. They took something simple and made a complete mess out of it. I love the early adopter horror stories, like people who bought sets that only do 480p and 1080i, and are faced with 720p/1080p game consoles. Or video game lag, and the TV manufacturers going "Duuuuuuuuh, video lag is a problem? Video games? Never heard of them! Wazzat? Duuuuhhh." The there's HD-DVD versus Blueray, or Blu-Ray, or Blooraye or whatever the fuck they named it. Plasma sucks. LCD sucks. DLP is sort of cool, but then you have to buy new bulbs at ass raping prices that make the printer ink market look charitable. Seriously, has there EVER been a clusterfuck like this in the history of consumer electronics? I've never seen such a mess, and I remember the first color TVs.
having a button that says "watch DVD" that can tell if the system is off or on and if off turn everything on, set it all up for DVD and even start the DVD that is in the player is worth every penny these executives and sports figures spend. and they cherish that $500.00 remote.
Hell, you just described the way my $80 Harmony remote is set up, discrete On/Off codes and all. I wouldn't pay $300 more for RF capabilities, that's for sure. Sounds like a tough sell to anyone not already spending $50,000 on a theater.
Reading through this made me realize that everyone is not really getting it...
These "cables" that we are using to connect devices are really just noodly appendages. Before you can truly understand how these noodly appendages work, you must embrace the FSM, and make Him a part of your life.
Ramen
In terms of long, have you ever tried to connect your receiver to a projector attached to the ceiling? You need a cable of about 30 feet or something. Bad thing. Loses sync all day long. It hasn't even been designed for _that_.
open (SIG, "</dev/zero"); $sig = <SIG>; close SIG;
And here, ladies and gentlemen, we see why DRM does not fail as hard as we would like. The parent knows about DRM and its implications, is technically savvy enough to post on /., has the money for various consumer devices, agrees (twice) that HDMI is bad because of DRM...
and yet, because of less cable clutter behind the TV, still gets HDMI connectors.
Any questions?