Posts Tagged HDCP

DVI to mini DisplayPort converter

It’s not uncommon as we upgrade parts of out computers to need adapters and other gear to make things work together. If you have your eyes set on a new display for your computer that uses DisplayPort and your machine lacks the right output Atlona has a new adapter just for you.

The adapter is called the AT-DP400 dual link DVI to Mini DisplayPort Converter. The converter is USB powered and works with Mac or PC systems. The device is specifically designed to work with the 27-inch iMac computer with resolutions up to 2560 x 1440. The screen connected to the adapter can be used as a main display or have the desktop extended to it.

The adapter is HCDP compliant and it also supports the 2560 x 1600 resolution that 30-inch LCDs use. The adapter will also let PS3 and Xbox users connect the consoles to the iMac without additional hardware at a resolution of up to 720p. The adapter is up for pre-order for $199 and is expected to ship on March 10.

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What is HDMI, Anyway?

Ever since HDMI-capable devices started to come onto the market a few years ago, there have been a lot of questions–and a lot of misconceptions–about HDMI and HDMI cables. A “FAQ” on this subject, as we’ve found in trying to assemble one, would be so long that the better way, we think, to provide some answers is to simply address the major question groups: What is HDMI, anyway? What’s in an HDMI cable? Why might I, or might I not, want to use an HDMI Cable as opposed to, say, component video? What makes one HDMI cable better than another, and when does it really matter?

So, What is HDMI, Anyway?
HDMI stands for “High-Definition Multimedia Interface.” The HDMI standard was developed by a consortium of consumer electronics manufacturers and content providers, to address what, from the content-provider industry’s standpoint, was a serious problem: existing analog video formats such as component video are not easily copy-protected. HDMI, being digital, provides a perfect platform for the implementation of a copy-protection scheme (HDCP, or “High-Definition Content Protection”) which enables the content providers to limit the consumer’s access to, and ability to copy, video content.

As we’ll see, HDMI is a horrid format; it was badly thought out and badly designed, and the failures of its design are so apparent that they could have been addressed and resolved with very little fuss. Why they weren’t, exactly, is really anyone’s guess, but the key has to be that the standard was not intended to provide a benefit to the consumer, but to such content providers as movie studios and the like. It would have been in the consumer’s best interests to develop a standard that was robust and reliable over distance, that could be switched, amplified, and distributed economically, and that connects securely to devices; but the consumer’s interests were, sadly, not really a priority for the developers of the HDMI standard.

What’s in an HDMI Cable?
The HDMI format is essentially a digital version of RGB analog video; the principal signal in an HDMI cable is carried on four shielded twisted pairs (yes, just like a CAT5 cable, but with shielding added), one of which is for red, one for blue, and one for green. Sync pulses, which tell the display where a line or frame ends or begins, are carried on the blue line. In some cases, rather than RGB video, HDMI carries Y/Pb/Pr “color-difference” video, which represents the same information as RGB but differently conveyed. The fourth twisted pair carries a digital clock signal, and seven miscellaneous additional conductors carry some signaling and incidental functions.

Why Might I Want to Use HDMI?
HDMI is often the handiest way to connect two devices; at the moment, that’s really the best reason to use it. However, in the future, it may become necessary to use HDMI connections with certain devices, or certain recorded media, in order to get full HD content. Beyond that, there aren’t a lot of compelling reasons to use HDMI as your connection method. Most of the arguments we hear are based upon common misconceptions about the benefits of HDMI, and one really needs to get past those to understand just what the real reasons to use–or not to use–HDMI are.

HDMI Myths and Misconceptions:
1. “Only HDMI carries High-Definition Signals.” Wrong, wrong, wrong. Analog component video and RGB both support high-definition resolutions, and what’s more, they’re more robust and dependable over distance. There likely will be cases, in the future, where high-definition signals are available from certain source recordings only through the HDMI port, and only downconverted standard-definition video will be available on analog outputs. However, as of this writing, none of the recordings available on high-definition disc formats have the “flag” set to limit HD output to HDMI. Some “upconverting” DVD players will output their upconverted signals only on HDMI, but the value of DVD-player upconversion ranges from dubious to clearly negative as in most cases it only adds an additional rescaling step to the signal chain.

2. “HDMI provides a pure uncompressed HD signal.” This is one of those statements which is true if taken in a wholly irrelevant sense, and untrue if taken in its only meaningful sense. Unless you work in a video production facility, chances are that you’ve never seen uncompressed HD video. That’s a shame, because it’s gorgeous; side-by-side comparison with, say, an ATSC broadcast signal or an HD-DVD signal can be a rude awakening, and just serves to highlight how heavily-compressed and artifact-laced all of the HD video sources we view are. No broadcast, and no recording medium, on the consumer market provides uncompressed HD video, and none are likely to do so in the near term.

So what is meant by the assertion that the HDMI signal is uncompressed? What this too-often-repeated statement actually means is that the signal is not further compressed when it is translated from its source format to HDMI. But the same is true of all source-to-display baseband video formats; component video and RGB are not compressed after the signal is decoded from a DVD or a broadcast signal. The assertion that HDMI is “uncompressed HD video” means only, then, that HDMI is no worse in this respect than any competing video format.

3. “When I use a digital source, I get a pure digital-to-digital signal chain using HDMI.” This, again, is true in an essentially meaningless sense, and untrue in the sense in which most people actually understand it. The assumption behind the statement is that the signal flows, unaltered and without degradation, from a digital source to a digital display without ever being converted, and that by eliminating these conversions–specifically, digital-to-analog conversions–one gets a better picture. But the HDMI signal is not the same as the signal recorded on a DVD, or sent in an ATSC or QAM transmission; all of those are compressed formats which encode video in an entirely different way from HDMI. Accordingly, to get from the one to the other requires decoding and conversion. In every case, the signal is decoded and rendered as a video stream. If the original signal is in one resolution, and the output format is in another, the image will be rescaled; if the original signal is recorded in one colorspace and the output format is in another, it’ll be converted. There is nothing inherently perfect or error-free about digital-to-digital, as opposed to digital-to-analog, scaling and conversions, and some things — scaling, in particular — are often more easily done well in the analog domain than in the digital domain.

So, yes, a DVD player putting out an upscaled HD resolution through an HDMI cable into a plasma display is an “all-digital” signal chain–but it’s an all-digital chain in which the colorspace is being converted, the original signal is being decoded and converted to another format, and the image is being rescaled not once, but twice along the way. Is doing this digitally superior to doing it in a chain that involves analog conversions? In any particular case it may be, or it may not be, but there’s no reason in principle to think that it necessarily will.

4. “Because HDMI is a digital signal, it doesn’t degrade when run over a long distance like an analog signal does, because it’s just ones and zeros.” Yikes! Not true at all. To explore this issue calls for a bit more detailed discussion.

First, it’s true that if a digital video signal stays intact from one point to another, there’s no degradation of the image. The digital signal itself can degrade, in purely electrical terms, quite a bit over a distance run, but if at the end of that run the bitstream can be fully and correctly reconstituted, it doesn’t matter what degradation the signal suffered–once that information is reconstituted at the receiving end, it’s as good as new.

That’s a big “if,” however. Ideally speaking, digital signals start out as something close to a “square wave,” which is an instantaneous transition from one voltage to another; these transitions signal the beginnings and ends of bits. (In practice, such transitions aren’t strictly possible, and trying to achieve them can generate harmful noise; consequently, high-order harmonics are usually filtered out which results in the wave starting out squarish but not-quite-square.) A square wave, unfortunately, is impossible to convey down any transmission line because it has infinite bandwidth; to convey it accurately, a cable would have to convey all frequencies, out to infinity, all at the same level of loss (“attenuation”). What happens, therefore, in any run of cable is that a digital signal starts out looking relatively nice and somewhat square, and comes out the other end both weaker and rounded-off. The transitions that mark the edges of bits get smoothed and leveled to the point that, far from that ideal square wave, they look like relatively gentle slopes. Portions of the signal lost to impedance mismatch bounce around in the cable and mix with these rounded-off slopes, introducing an unpredictable and irregular component to the signal; crosstalk from the other pairs in the HDMI bundle also contribute uneven and essentially random noise. As a result, what arrives at your display doesn’t look very much like what was sent.

Now, as we’ve said, up to a point, this won’t matter; the bitstream gets accurately reconstituted, and the picture on your display is as good as the HDMI signal can make it. But when it starts to fail, it starts to fail conspicuously and dramatically. The first sign of an HDMI signal failure is digital dropouts–these are colloquially referred to as “sparklies”–where a pixel or two can’t be read. When these “sparklies” are seen, total failure is not far away; if the cable were made ten feet longer, there’s a chance that so little information would get through that there would be no picture on the display at all.

The shame is that, with HDMI, this is prone to happen at rather short lengths. When DVI was first introduced (same encoding scheme, same cable structure, but a different connector from HDMI), it was hard to find cables that were reliable in lengths over 15 feet. The fact that these multipin cables aren’t economical to manufacture in the US and so were being produced exclusively in China, too, didn’t help; Chinese cable manufacturers are very good at keeping costs down, but not the best at keeping tolerances tight. Today, a good HDMI cable can be relatively reliable up to about 50 feet, but because different devices tolerate signal degradation differently, it’s impossible to say categorically that a 50 foot cable will work; it’s only possible to say that it will work with most devices.

Why is that? Well, it all has to do with bad design. The designers of the HDMI standard didn’t really think much about the cable problem, and it shows. This topic is fairly complex in itself, so we’ve split it out into a separate article: What’s the Matter with HDMI Cable?

Analog video signals, contrary to what seems to be the conventional wisdom in home theater circles, are extremely robust over distance. We have run component video for hundreds of feet without observable degradation; the bandwidth of precision video coax, rather than being horribly overtaxed like that of an HDMI cable, is greatly in excess of what’s needed to convey any HD signal. It is true that an analog signal degrades progressively with length; but that degradation, in practice, is so slight and slow that it rarely gives rise to any observable image quality loss in home theater applications.

5. “An HDMI connection is always superior to an analog component video connection.” Not so, for the reasons we’ve addressed above. Further, we’ve noticed that it’s not at all uncommon for the HDMI input to a display to be calibrated very differently from the analog inputs. One plasma display we set up looked very bad when fed an HDMI signal–scenes became washed-out and slightly greenish, and the black level was set all wrong so that high-contrast scenes really had no black to them at all, just a sort of muddy-gray color. After some display tweaking, we were able to rehabilitate the HDMI input so that it looked as good as the component video input–but depending on what calibrations are available to you, how your display’s been set up, and ultimately perhaps upon some subjective aesthetic considerations, it’s not necessarily always going to be possible to get your best picture out of an HDMI input. Whether it looks better, or worse, than the component video input in any particular case will depend on the source, the display, the calibration of the source, the calibration of the display, and, ultimately — since these matters can be somewhat subjective — your judgment.

One note: HDMI will almost always look better than an s-video or composite (not component!) video input. S-video and composite video are both limited to 480i resolution, and do not render color as well as a three-color format like component video or HDMI.

What Makes one HDMI Cable Better than Another, and Does it Matter?
HDMI cable quality is a bit complicated, and unfortunately, it’s hard to judge from a spec sheet, especially because very few manufacturers provide any useful product specs. There are a few things to bear in mind.

At present, to our knowledge, all of our competitors’ HDMI cables are built in China (for more detail on this point, see this article). The Blue Jeans Cable Belden HDMI cables are the only HDMI cables which are manufactured, in principal part, in the USA (at this time, although the cable is made here, we rely on Chinese vendors to affix connectors to it; we hope to bring connectorization of HDMI cables in house in 2008). We are often told that some brand or other of HDMI cable is manufactured in the US, and in every case, we’ve found that not to be so; rather, what often happens is that while the cable is sourced from China, the marketing materials obscure the fact. Don’t let the fact that an HDMI cable bears a U.S. brand name lead you to believe that that HDMI cable contains American products, American labor or American know-how; none of them, other than ours, do. And China may be an easy place to get a good price, but it is not a good place to get a leading-edge technological product; for top-quality data cables (and HDMI is a data cable), the US is still the place to go.

The Chinese source problem makes it very hard to get a spec sheet, and very hard to know what that spec sheet means, when dealing with an HDMI cable. Most vendors of HDMI cable in the US don’t know what attributes would make a good HDMI cable, and since they don’t participate in the manufacture beyond specifying jacket printing and the shape of the molded connector, they don’t really have much reason to find out. The result is that most citations to product spec that one finds in connection with the sale of HDMI cable are references to the product’s wire gage. Wire gage is somewhat meaningful, but judging HDMI cable quality by comparing wire gage is like judging automobile quality by comparing engine block length–a very, very inexact way of looking at the problem.

The primary work of an HDMI cable is done by the four shielded twisted pairs which carry the color, sync, and clock signals. The designers of the HDMI standard made an inexcusable error of judgment in running these signals balanced, in twisted pairs, rather than unbalanced, in coaxes; attenuation (the tendency of the signal to get weaker with distance) is much greater, and impedance and timing are harder to control, in twisted pairs than in coax. Control of the cable impedance is critical to keeping the rounding of the bit edges under control; the more the impedance wanders off of spec, the more the signal will round, and the closer the cable comes to failure. Where a coaxial cable’s impedance can be controlled within two percent of spec, it’s a challenge to keep a twisted pair any tighter than about 15% plus or minus.

The HDMI signal will fail if attenuation is too high, or if the bit transitions become excessively rounded so that the receiving unit can’t reconstitute them accurately. There’s no really reliable benchmark for just how much attenuation is acceptable, or how round the shoulders can be, before the “sparklies” will start. (Yes, there are specs for these things in the official HDMI spec document, but real-world devices vary so much that meeting the spec is no guarantee of success, while failing it is no guarantee of actual failure.) But while wire gage has something to do with the former, it’s really the latter that’s important; and wire gauge has nothing to do, at least directly, with impedance control.

Transmission line impedance, in any cable, is dependent on the cable’s materials and physical dimensions. For purposes of an HDMI cable, these are:
1. the shape and size of the paired wires;
2. the thickness, and dielectric properties, of the insulation on the paired wires;
3. the dimensions of the shield over the pair.
These seem, in principle, like simple things to control–that is, until one spends a bit of time in a wire and cable factory and finds out just how many little problems there are. Wire is never perfect; its dimensions and shape vary from point to point, and small dimensional variations can make for significant impedance changes. Wire can suffer from periodicity (in fact, strictly speaking, it not only can, but always, at some level, does) because it’s been drawn over a wheel that was microscopically out-of-round, and that periodicity will cause the wire to resonate at particular wavelengths, which can really wreak havoc. The plastic dielectric has to be consistently extruded to the correct diameter (and thousandths of an inch matter here!); if it’s foamed, it needs to have highly consistent bubble size so that one side of the dielectric isn’t airier than another, or one foot airier than the next. The two wires in the pair need not to wander in relation to one another; as they “open up” or are pressed tightly together because of tensioning on the wire-twisting machine (or tension applied to the cable by other handling, or by shield application, or…), or because the finished cable is being flexed, the impedance changes. The shield is a factor in the impedance as well, because both signal wires have capacitance to the shield, and if the foil is wrapped more tightly in one place and more loosely in another, that, too, will cause impedance to vary. (And these are just a few of the obvious problems; manufacturing processes involve other problems that nobody not involved in manufacturing would ever think of. For example, the lube that’s used to assist in wire drawing needs to be washed off the wire before dielectric is extruded over it; what if the side from which a jet of cleaner is fired at the wire gets cleaner than the opposite side, and the dielectric winds up conforming differently to one side of the cable than the other? What about the other thousand things you and I, not working in a wire factory, have never even begun to think about?) As a result, although every manufacturer’s HDMI cable is built to meet a nominal 100 ohm characteristic impedance, every foot of every cable is different from every other. The best one can do is to hold impedance within a range, centered on 100 ohms; the official HDMI spec calls for 100 ohms plus or minus 15%, which for a coax would be horribly sloppy. The tighter that tolerance can be kept, the better the performance will be.

Worse still, impedance is not a one-dimensional characteristic. HDMI cable operates over an enormous frequency bandwidth, and impedance in a twisted pair is frequency-dependent (in a coax it is, too, but far, far less so). A twisted pair’s impedance will rise relative to frequency; how much it will do so, and how evenly and regularly, will depend upon subtle physical characteristics. So, strictly speaking, no cable can actually be within tolerance for impedance over the whole operating range of the cable; it can only be within tolerance by the method the spec designates for measurement.

Impedance control is important for another reason: timing. As impedance varies, so will the time it takes a signal to travel down the cable. Electricity travels at nearly the speed of light; how close to the speed of light it travels depends on the dielectric, and is referred to as the “velocity of propagation.” The objective, in putting together the four pairs in an HDMI cable, is to have them be identical; but in actual practice, each pair in a four-pair set will have its own delay. If the delay of one pair is sufficiently greater than the delay of another pair, the receiving device will not know which “red” pixel belongs to which “blue” and “green” pixel, or if the clock circuit is off, it may be impossible to time any of the color signals reliably. Since this delay depends on the consistency and dimensions of the dielectric, and the consistency and dimensions of the dielectric are important factors in impedance, the same requirement for consistent impedance applies here; if impedance is too inconsistent, timing will be too inconsistent, and the whole system will fail.

One way of looking at cable performance is to chart the attenuation for a given length of cable against frequency. For any cable, attenuation (measured in dB) will increase with frequency; this attenuation comes from a few factors. Loss to resistance goes up with frequency, because higher frequency signals are able to use less and less of the cross-section of the wire (this is known as “skin effect”) and so have less copper to travel through. Losses to reactance — capacitance and inductance — also increase with frequency. Then, what we call “return loss” adds the most irregular, and difficult-to-control, component to the loss. “Return loss” is the loss to impedance mismatch, and is so called because it represents the portion of the signal which is lost when, upon encountering a change in the impedance of the circuit (this may be a change in impedance along the cable, or a change of impedance on entering or leaving a connector, or a circuit board trace, or encountering a different impedance than expected at the load end of the circuit), it reflects back along the cable towards the source rather than being delivered to the load. While basic resistive and reactive losses are pretty reliable and have a definite relationship to frequency, return loss can be quite irregular. A graph of return loss against frequency, rather than showing a nice, consistent curve, is characterized by sharp, spiky lines. Why is this? Well, return loss has to do, more than anything else, with those manufacturing tolerances and their impact upon impedance. Every wire, at some level, has some periodicity, and so resonates somewhat at some unintended frequency. Every dielectric extruder fails, at some level, to extrude the dielectric consistently; every spooler that winds wire or dielectric-covered wire, every wire twister, every unreeler that handles that wire as it goes back into another stage of processing, every foil-wrap and drain-wire machine, every planetary cabler (which bundles and twists the pairs together with one another), every jacket handler and extruder–all of these machines, in all of these processes, apply microscopic irregularities to the cable which show up as return loss. Return loss can’t be eliminated, at least not in a real-world cable; but it can be, within limits, made as small and as consistent across a range of frequencies, as possible.

Generally speaking, devices handle very linear or predictable losses very well. If one knows that one part of a signal will come in a thousand times weaker than another part, it’s easy to “EQ” the incoming signal to boost the weak part to match the level of the strong part. But return loss can’t be EQ’d out because it’s too uneven and unpredictable.

Return loss, not resistance, is the critical consideration in determining the quality of an HDMI cable; if one were comparing cables with similar resistance, capacitance, and inductance values against one another, and consulting a chart of attenuation relative to frequency, what one would generally see would be that cables with superior return loss characteristics would show a flatter attenuation curve than the others. This is very important in HDMI because the required bandwidth for an HDMI signal is enormous, and the higher the frequency, the harder it is to control return loss.

Generally, in looking at HDMI cable products currently available on the market, we’ve found that these issues get overlooked. Instead of trying to control impedance well, which will result in flattening the curve on the attenuation chart, manufacturers generally try to control resistance. Why? Well, resistance is a lot easier to control. Bigger wire (smaller AWG number) has less resistance, and choice of materials can play a role, too (silver-plated copper is lower in resistance than bare copper, and bare copper is lower in resistance than tin-plated copper, for example). But as the frequency demands placed on the cable increase, bigger wire doesn’t really help all that much (and, for a whole slew of reasons having to do with manufacturing process control, it can actually hurt), because it’s not the total loss that’s limiting performance; it’s the non-linear component of the loss that’s the real problem. With return loss specs not generally available for Chinese-sourced cable, one often can’t get a good idea exactly what basis there is for comparison between two HDMI cables.

So, how does one compare? We provide a spec sheet for our HDMI cable, but you will find, if you go looking for similar specs on competing products, that spec sheets are few and far between. Another basis for comparison is to get your vendor to send you a copy of his compliance testing certificate–but, for various reasons, many vendors cannot or will not supply this information. Sometimes, all one can do is try a cable on a given set of devices, and see if it works. That may not be the most satisfying answer, but it is often the only answer there is.

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Atlona DVI to Mini DisplayPort Adapter

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Atlona Technologies innovative DVI to Mini DisplayPort converter, the DP200, officially compatible with iMac 21.5 and iMac 27″ displays.

Atlona Technologies announces news on their DVI to Mini DisplayPort converter, allowing compatibility with iMac 21.5 and iMac 27” displays.

Atlona Technologies DVI to Mini DisplayPort converter, the AT-DP200, has quickly made an impact on all Mac users as well as the technological world as a whole. This innovative converter has made waves being the first of its kind to eliminate the issues that plagued many Apple users had faced purchasing their computers before 2009, and wanting to use the Apple Cinema 24’’ or any of the newer and upcoming Mini DisplayPort monitors. Atlona technologies officially finished a new round of testing using the iMac 21.5” and the iMac 27” with this unique solution.

Atlona Technologies prides itself on creating the very solutions users need to connect nearly any desired source to any display needed. Seeing that there was indeed a need that had not been met, the first ever conversion box that would allow conversion of DVI to Mini DisplayPort while maintaining the displays optimal resolution was created. Unlike recent copycat products, the AT-DP200 inputs DVI and outputs Mini DisplayPort signal while passing along all EDID and HDCP information. This device converts while allowing your computer to scale to the optimal resolution offered by your display up to 1920 by 1200.

Realizing what a true necessity this product was and the many new monitors continuously in development, Atlona made sure to go directly to the source. The AT-DP200 was put through extensive testing in Apple’s compatibility lab, placing it up against every single Apple computer with a DVI port, and every monitor featuring Mini DisplayPort. The DP200 was also placed through PC interoperability testing with all standard DVI video cards. This device will allow use of any Mini Display port product with and DVI graphics card, meaning the new Apple 24” Cinema Displays, the iMac 21.5” or the iMac 27” can be used by those with DVI Macs.

The Atlona AT-DP200, DVI to Mini DisplayPort converter immediately fell right in line with the rest of the bleeding edge products designed to keep the AV world connected. This unit has finally given all Mac users looking to use their older devises on newer Mac monitors exactly what they have been waiting for. The leading-edge AT-DP200 is officially available today with an affordable MSRP of S179.00.

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NXP Introduces Intelligent Switches Supporting HDMI 1.4

NXP Semiconductors has unveiled intelligent switches supporting the HDMI 1.4 specification released in June 2009. The NXP TDA19997 and TDA19998 smart switches support the Audio Return Channel (ARC) feature, a new option introduced in the HDMI 1.4 release, which reduces the number of cables required to deliver audio upstream for processing and playback. Building on the success of previous HDMI smart switches from NXP, the TDA19997 and TDA19998 also include support for all mandatory 3D over HDMI features. NXP is the one of the first semiconductor companies to deliver silicon supporting HDMI 1.4.

The new Audio Return Channel specified in HDMI 1.4 enables HDTVs directly receiving audio and video content to send the audio stream to an amplification system over the HDMI cable, eliminating the need for an extra cable. The NXP TDA19997 and TDA19998 smart switches also include built-in auto-adaptive equalizers that can handle up to four HDMI 1.4 inputs, automatically maintaining audio-visual quality over HDMI cables up to 30m in length. Their highly integrated design offers a compelling solution that eliminates the need for external components, reducing the overall Bill of Materials for TV manufacturers while delivering an enhanced viewing experience. The TDA19997 and TDA19998 are embedded with five EDID extensions for HDMI and VGA, as well as high levels of ESD protection.

The TDA19998 smart switches take advantage of NXP’s patented F3 (Fast, Fair and Faithful) architecture, which guarantees fast port switching between HDMI devices while keeping a secured HDCP-protected HDMI stream at the output. The F3 architecture also enables best-in-class power efficiency of all system in both active and stand-by modes.

The NXP TDA19997 and TDA19998 comprise the second generation of NXP’s highly popular HDMI smart switches, and are part of a wide portfolio of highly scalable solutions for the digital home, enabling TV makers to target a broad audience – from the most price-sensitive segments to the most feature-oriented markets. The TDA19997 and TDA19998 are pin-to-pin compatible with previous generation smart switches from NXP, and provide TV makers with unprecedented flexibility in adapting to end user demand in terms of price, features and power consumption, as well as operator and content providers’ requirements for security and performance.

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WXGA projectors for large venues

There are so many uses for projectors from boring presentations at school or the office to the much more fun like big screen gaming or football games. No matter what you are using a projector for, it has to be appropriate for the environment it will be used in. Big venues are especially demanding on projectors with the need for a very bright device.

 

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NEC has announced a new projector for large venues called the NP4100W. The projector has a massive 5500 ANSI lumens making it bright enough for large venues and rooms with poor light control. The projector uses DLP technology for improved contrast and response time.

The projector can be fitted with optional lenses supporting screen sizes of 40 to 500-inches at distances from 2.8 feet to 304 feet. The projector can also be used with single or dual lamps depending on the implementation. NEC also offers an optional six-segment color wheel for rich colors. The contrast ratio is 2100:1 and the native screen resolution is 1280 x 800. Connectivity features include DVI-D with HDCP, RCA, s-video component, and 15-pin BNC.

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AV receiver with internet radio and DLNA streaming – Onkyo

Onkyo have dropped a new home AV receiver, the company’s first such home theater product to include Pandora, Rhapsody, and Sirius streaming internet radio support.   The Onyko TX-NR807 supports DLNA 1.5 media streaming, for playback of media stored on networked computers and drives, together with offering six HDMI ports, Faroudja DCDi Cinema 1080p upscaling and both Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

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There’s also Audyssey DSX soundstage extension processing and support for MP3, WMA, FLAC, Lossless, Ogg Vorbis and AAC files, together with a bi-directional remote control, ethernet port and 7.1 surround sound.  The TX-NR807 also supports multi-room audio, with powered zone two and three options as well as a serial port for system integration.

Amp power is seven channels of 135W, and there are various digital inputs/outputs as well as the HDMI (which you can see in the gallery below).  The TX-NR807 is joined by the TX-SR707, which has the same local switching but only 7 x 100W amplification and no networking functionality.

The Onkyo TX-NR807 is available now, with an MRSP of $1,099; the Onkyo TX-SR707, meanwhile, has an MRSP of $899.

Onkyo Debuts Mid-Price THX Select2 Plus AV Receiver With Streaming Internet Radio Capabilities and DLNA 1.5 Networking Compatibility.

With the growing market for advanced internet radio services like Pandora, Rhapsody, Sirius Internet Radio, and vTuner, consumers increasingly seek to integrate their home entertainment systems with the internet.

UPPER SADDLE RIVER, NJ (8/10/09) — Onkyo has introduced and begun shipping its first network-capable home theater receiver configured for Pandora, Rhapsody, and Sirius’ streaming internet radio services. The new Onkyo TX-NR807 also capable of playing computer music files from networked PCs, is fully compatible with the Digital Living Network Alliance’s DLNA 1.5 consumer electronics interoperability specification, and sells for less than half the price of the company’s previous network-capable model. With THX Select2 Plus certification and state-of-the-art processing from Dolby, DTS, Audyssey and Faroudja, the Onkyo TX-NR807 offers high definition audio and video performance. The TX-NR807 and non-networking TX-SR707, also introduced today, are Onkyo’s first receivers to offer Audyssey DSX soundstage extension processing in addition to Dolby Pro Logic IIz height-capabilities.

The Onkyo TX-NR807 connects directly to the internet or a home network via a rear-panel Ethernet port. The receiver’s on-screen user interface allows users direct access to Pandora, Rhapsody, Sirius Internet Radio, and vTuner streaming radio services, or to access MP3, WMA, FLAC, Lossless, Ogg Vorbis, and AAC files from any computer or storage device on the network. The receiver is Windows 7 compatible, and its Ethernet port can also be used for firmware updates.

The TX-NR807 also includes Onkyo’s new Bi-Directional Preprogrammed RI Remote Control which will impress anyone who has ever been frustrated by the trial-and-error manual data inputs and paper listings usually needed to program associated TV’s, disc players, cable boxes, and other components. Onkyo’s new system allows users to select from a on-screen list of compatible products, and then automatically transmit the codes from the receiver to the remote control. The remote also offers up to four macro programs for simultaneous activation of multiple components and feature sets.

As a premium home theater receiver, the TX-NR807 is also the perfect match for high definition video displays with Blu-ray players and other HD sources. It has six HDMI 1.3a inputs, 1080p video upscaling of all sources using the powerful Faroudja DCDi Cinema processor chip. On the audio side it has a full suite of surround processing, including lossless Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

The Onkyo TX-NR807 is one of the first receivers to incorporate Audyssey DSX technology, which allows the back surround channels to be retasked for front-wide speakers to expand the width of the sounds stage, or for front height speakers to provide vertical ambience effects. The receiver also includes Audyssey MultiEQ room calibration technology, plus that company’s Dynamic Volume and Dynamic EQ processing. Dolby ProLogic IIz processing is also included to provide an alternate implementation of height channel technology.

The TX-NR807 has seven powerful 135-watts-per-channel Onkyo WRAT (Wide Range Amplifier Technology) amplifier sections for high output and low distortion, offering a dynamic power rating of 300 watts into 3 ohms. It has an extensive array of analog and digital inputs and outputs, including an MM/MC phono input. Its multiroom audio capabilities are similarly extensive with Powered Zone 2 and 3 capabilities, multiple DC triggers, bidirectional RS-232, and Onkyo’s exclusive Universal Port for connection of an optional iPod Dock and HD Radio tuner.

The Onkyo TX-NR807 is now shipping to Onkyo dealers and will have a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $1,099.

Onkyo Debuts TX-SR707

Onkyo has also introduced the TX-SR707 THX-Select2 Plus home theater receiver, which has the same advanced high definition audio and video processing features as the TX-NR807, but uses a 7 x 100 Watts power amplifier section, Powered Zone 2, conventional preprogrammed remote control, and has no networking capabilities. The Onkyo TX-SR707 is currently available with a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $899.

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LCD HDTVs with integrated Blu-ray from Sharp’s AQUOS DX2-series

Sharp Japan have unveiled their latest range of AQUOS HDTVs, each packing an integrated Blu-ray player.  The DX2-series LCD displays range in size from 26-inches to 52-inches and have a slot-loading Blu-ray drive in their right-hand side; they also support BD-Live and IPTV via an ethernet connection.

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The range kicks off with two HD-Ready sets, the LC-26DX2 and LC-32DX2, packing 1,366 x 768 resolution panels, then rises through the Full HD LC-40DX2, LC-46DX2 and LC-52DX2 each with 1,920 x 1080 panels.  Contrast on the former two is 7,000:1, while on the latter three it’s 15,000:1; there are also two HDMI ports on the 26 and 32 inch sets, rising to three on the 40, 46 and 52 inchers.

All five sizes will land in Japan on September 10th, with pricing yet to be announced.  Also unknown is the release date in the US or Europe.

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USB Displays Coming; Forget About DVI, HDMI

Waging standard wars is one of those annoying, but unavoidable flaws in today’s setup of the technology industry. In a perfect world, there would only be one standard defining a technology, but the reality is that in a diverse environment as IT, there will always be different interests and there will always be customers at stake, sparking different ideas of how a certain technology should look like: Take the display segment, for example, and take a closer look at the history of interfaces will reveal a huge mess of D-SUB 15/DB-15, BNC, HDI-45, ADC, DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI, DisplayPort. Has anyone ever thought about the idea of reusing another interface with a proven track record and that has been around for quite some time to connect a PC to a monitor… such as USB?

Of course there have been such people. Among those were Quentin Stafford-Fraser and Martin King, who were driven by the idea that multi-monitor setups should be less so complicated, which resulted in the founding of DisplayLink back in 2003. Initially, they worked on the idea to use Ethernet to connect a monitor to a PC, but quickly shifted their focus to USB. The technology made its market debut in 2007 as part of the 19″ Samsung SyncMaster 940UX monitor. Today, there are about 20 different products with DisplayLink chips available and there is more to come: We have no doubt that some of the products we saw down in Silicon Valley will create lots of buzz on gadget-crazy sites.

How DisplayLink works

An old saying claims that there is no such thing as free lunch. And that is also true with DisplayLink and its capability to transmit data between the PC and a monitor. To be able to squeeze picture through the limited bandwidth of the USB 2.0 standard (480 Mb/s), DisplayLink uses a tiling approach. The technology continuously checks the frame buffer inside a GPU for refreshed parts of the screen, using nothing else but a USB 2.0/Wireless USB connect to refresh the displayed picture. At least in theory, this would mean that you can connect as many screens as you want and you would only need a single cable. Or no cable at all (if you are using a Wireless USB hub).

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DP-160 chip on DisplayLink PCB: This is the place where DisplayLink enables USB displays.

In terms of hardware, the tiling process is covered by a combination of DP-120 or DP-160 chips with DDR memory. DP-120 is DisplayLink’s debut chip and supports resolutions of up to 1440 x 900 pixels, while the more powerful DP-160 will officially support resolutions of up to 1600 x 1200 pixels (1680 x 1050 pixels if we are talking about 16:10). Physical limitations are either six daisy-chained 1280 x 1024 displays or several 1680 x 1050 monitors. In theory, you should have no issues connecting one monitor with an USB cable, and then connecting that monitor to another one.

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A look in how DisplayLink exactly works.

Sadly, we live in an imperfect world and this technology is not without flaws. As you can imagine, rapid image movements impacts the display refresh rate. This limitation reveals itself especially in fast-paced games and movies. USB 2.0 and Wireless USB suffer from bandwidth limits and DisplayLink users simply have to deal with occasional stuttering in certain applications. However, we expect this problem to be resolved once USB 3.0 is introduced and supported.

On the software side, DisplayLink supports 32-bit Windows XP and Vista as well as Mac OS X. 64-bit Windows XP/Vista drivers are currently in their alpha stage with an expected final release date of Q3 2008 (August). Given these limitations we took a test drive of the technology using Windows XP Professional 32-bit and Vista 32-bit. We will be waiting for the 64-bit drivers and if you are wondering about Linux, we will have to disappoint you: DisplayLink is very cautious about its intellectual property, which means that it can’t open source most of its code. Don’t expect Linux support anytime soon.

The only real issue of these displays is a lack of HDCP support, since DisplayLink’s encryption cannot encrypt encrypted packages. As a result, you will not be able to run HDCP-protected content such as Blu-ray movies on these displays. Dennis Crespo, DisplayLink’s head of marketing with an engineering head, said that the negotiation with the RIAA/MPAA – who are very protective of high-definition content – is an ongoing process: The problem here is that it is nearly impossible to explain that DisplayLink offers protected display path, we were told.

To give you an impression what experience the DisplayLink technology is offering, we decided to have a closer look at two monitors and two USB adapters. We were especially interested in the true limitations of the USB adapters. Samsung and LG are currently offering 19/22+7″ and 20″ displays. We had a chance to look at the Samsung 19” model.

Over the past couple of weeks, we have used not one, but two 19″ Samsung SyncMaster 940ux monitors in combination with a Sewell USB to DVI External Video Card. A HP Pavilion tx1000 notebook and various testbed systems (mostly equipped with Intel Core 2 Extreme processors and Nvidia/ATI graphics cards) served as PCs.

Samsung SyncMaster 940ux

SyncMaster 940ux does not differ from the regular business-oriented 19″ displays offered by Samsung today. This LCD was the launch product for DisplayLink and the specifications haven’t changed since then. The business-focused monitor uses a TN panel and displays a resolution of 1280 x 1024 pixels. Other specifications include brightness of 300 Candela, a contrast ratio of 1000:1 and a 5 ms GTG response time. According to the spec, this display should feature 160 degree horizontal and vertical viewing angles, which were actually closer to 165 degrees according to our measurements.

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Two displays connected using a single USB cable.

Connecting the display is really something new. You only need to connect the power cord as well as a USB cable between the LCD and your PC. DVI and Analog D-SUB connectors remain unused. It gets more fun when you want to connect a second LCD: Take another USB cable and simply connect the second monitor.

We experienced a flawless installation and removal from all tested computers. You are disabling the display simply by using the Safe Remove Hardware option – the same way you work with USB flash drives and other USB hardware.

We have noticed that 720p HD video ran in our environment without noticeable stuttering, while playing games proved to be a smooth experience as well. If you play World of Warcraft or similar genre, strategies, or a Flight Simulator, you should not notice any difference to traditional displays. However, the bandwidth limits showed up in games such as Unreal Tournament III, Gears of War and Call of Duty 4: It seems that those games don’t like the tiling architecture. In Need for Speed: Pro Street we noticed issues with motion blur. Interestingly enough, the USN display worked well with other games such as Crysis and Half-Life 2: Episode Two. But our recommendation clearly is to stay away from a DisplayLink display, if you are running fast-paced games – at least as long as we are still waiting for USB 3.0.

We enjoyed several movies and had zero issues with movie playback, even in fast scenes. We were not able to detect a visible differences or disadvantages over DVI in titles such as Superman Returns, Terminator 3 and LoTR: Return of The King.

That, of course, means that you won’t notice any difference in everyday applications such as web surfing, Photoshop, YouTube, Excel, Word, Skype or a Media Player.

Given the fact that the USB controller requires CPU cycles to work, there is an obvious concerns how much of your CPU this technology will need. Two connected monitors resulted in a 30% load on a single Intel “Core 2″ CPU core, or about 8% on a quad-core Core 2 Extreme QX6800 (2.93 GHz). Expect 50% of one Q6600 core being loaded in such a scenario.

If you are looking at a much less powerful CPU, such as AMD’s Turion 64 X2 2.0 GHz, the numbers were a total CPU load of 60-70% – or 100% of one core. That leaves you with only 30-40% of your available processing power. So, plan on using such a system with a powerful processor, ideally a high-end quad-core chip.

Sewell USB External Video Card

If you own a notebook, there is a pretty good chance that your laptop does not come with DVI output. It is a sad reality, but the majority of consumer notebooks feature only an old analog D-SUB connection and connecting your laptop to anything bigger than a 22″ display usually results in a terrible picture.

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Sewell’s compact, $130 USB external video card.

Sewell offers an USB External Video Card, a small USB box that features a mini-USB connector on one side and a DVI connector on the other. Inside the box, you will find a DP-160 chip and a clock generator on the top and a single 16 MB EtronTech chip clocked at 250 MHz DDR (500 MT/s) at the bottom.

Working with this card was a true pleasure: Plug the USB cable into one side and the DVI cable into the other. Windows and Mac OS X recognize the device, but you have to have a driver CD available or download the latest driver software. This is less practical than the LCD display, which only required connecting the display with the computer. This is somewhat of a convenience drawback, especially if you consider that Sewell is asking for $130 for this part – quite a bit for a plastic box with a PCB in it. It works great, but it is simply overpriced. You can’t charge a premium without providing that premium feeling.

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This is how Device Manager looks like – you get a virtual graphics card and, consequently, virtual monitors.

If we put that aside, the experience with the device was flawless. Owners of a Macbook Air can use this part to get a second or third monitor. And what is even more interesting: Our screenshot was taken on a Dell 2407WFP-HC display in its native resolution: The DP-160 supports 24″ native resolution of 1900 x 1200 pixels, meaning you can plug in one or two Apple Cinema Displays (one via a mini-DVI connector). You can handle displays in the standard Display Properties just like any other display else. During the test period, we had no issues with the product.

Conclusion

After using DisplayLink for several weeks, we got used to extending our notebooks to desktop displays and vice versa. The two Samsung displays are working great together and we found that using USB is more efficient than buying anti-cluttering kits. The removal of DVI, Analog D-SUB, HDMI or DisplayPort cables is something we welcome in a cable-burdened world of computers. Don’t get us wrong, DisplayLink is not without drawbacks. However, these flaws should go away as soon as more bandwidth is offered with USB 3.0.

At the end of the day, we believe that DisplayLink is a promising technology. Without doubt a company to watch.

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HDMI OVER CAT5/6 ETHERNET EXTENDER TRANSPORTS HDMI, I.R. AND DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO by OCTAVA

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The HDMI-OCAT-IR HDMI over Ethernet Transceiver allows installers to use a pair of standard CAT 5/ 6 cables to carry HDMI, I.R. control, and Optical Digital Toslink Audio signals for simple and efficient installations.

Norcross, Ga. – Octava Inc., specialists in HDMI distribution equipment, announced the release of the next generation HDMI over CAT 5/6 Ethernet cable Extender, model HDMI-OCAT-IR.

This unique HDMI over CAT 5/6 Extender includes a set of HDMI Transmitter and a HDMI Receiver and allows transmission of HDMI , Infrared IR and Optical Digital Toslink Audio over 150ft over a pair of Ethernet cables. CAT 6 cable is recommended for 1080P and best performance.

The HDMI-OCAT-IR HDMI over Ethernet Transceiver allows installers to use a pair of standard CAT 5/ 6 cables to carry HDMI, I.R. control, and Optical Digital Toslink Audio signals for simple and efficient installations. Infrared Extension allows I.R. signals to be sent from viewing area to the equipment room. Optical Audio Toslink In/ Out port is provided to extend Optical Toslink Audio signal from Source to the Surround Sound Receiver.
Ethernet cables and connectors are easily field terminated thus allowing installers to easily install the proper length cable needed for ultimate flexibility and eliminate logistics problems of having custom length HDMI cables. This unique solution enables installers to have complete
A pair of Ethernet cables is required to carry the video / audio as well as HDCP data.
Active Drive and Compensation circuitry ensures error free video transmission for the ultimate HD experience. Typical connection lengths are:300 ft ( upto 50m), ( 1080i), 150ft (1080p). Both the receiver and transmitter include an external power supply to ensure best quality performance and do not require power from the HD source.
HDMI is the latest standard for distributing High Definition Digital Video and Audio in high def displays for 2 reasons: 1) uncompressed digital format ensures the best picture quality and 2) HDMI allows content providers to ensure that their intellectual property is protected through HDCP.

Product available at: http://www.ukhdmi.com

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Ofcom approves platform for wireless high definition usage

It’s been over two years since Toshiba developed 60GHz wireless technology for bandwidth-intensive streaming applications, such as uncompressed high definition video and audio.

Although the technology gained industry support it does seem as if the predicted wireless HDTV explosion will rely more on the 802.11n at 5GHz.

So, will Ofcom’s recent, and very speedy, decision to open up the 57GHz-66GHz spectrum, make any difference?

According to reports, Panasonic is looking at integrating wireless technology within this frequency range into its new HDTVs — at a price, of course.

Two obvious advantages to wireless streaming of uncompressed HD content are for getting video and audio from a PC or Blu-ray player to a display, and for building ultra-thin TVs where the receiver is housed in a separate box.

I’m not sure the new spectrum will make much difference for those wanting to watch content from their laptop onto a TV because many PCs already have 802.11n Wi-Fi built-in, so it would be much more cost effective to fit a wireless receiver to an HDMI port on the TV.

For TV manufacturers wanting to separate receiver from screen, the technology may be worth building in — it has a range of about 10 metres — though 802.11n technology on 5GHz also has a very good range and is possibly more of a mainstream technology at present.

So, hats off to Ofcom for clearing the airwaves to make wireless HD a possibility. I’m just not convinced that it will have an immediate impact. What do you think?

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