HDMI TO DVI-D CABLE - HDMI (High-Definition
Multimedia Interface). HDMI is a small, user-friendly interconnect that
provides up to 5 Gbps of bandwidth to support high - definition video plus
multi - channel audio in a single cable.
The Digital Visual Interface (DVI) is a
video interface standard designed to maximize the visual quality of digital
display devices such as flat panel LCD computer displays and digital
projectors. It is designed primarily for carrying uncompressed digital video
data to a display. It is compatible with the HDMI standard.
All interconnects are designed to suppress
RF interference and to ensure a clean signal path is maintained. High
quality molded plugs or metal 24 K gold plated connectors are used for the
best possible connection. The composition of the cables is individual to
each lead allowing for the best performance to be achieved.
The HDMI to
DVI-D Cable supports video resolutions up to 1920 x 1080 and data rates to
5Gbps. This superior cable features fully molded construction, a
super-flexible satin black PVC jacket with 24K gold-plated contacts.
High Definition Multimedia Interface, or
HMDI, transmits pure digital video and digital audio over a single, easily
managed cable. Like the DVI standard on which it is based, HDMI transmits
uncompressed high-definition video with a theoretical bandwidth over
5Gb/sec, but adds 6-channel digital audio and a bi-directional control
channel that lets components communicate with each other. The benefits of
this new technology are significant: razor-sharp images over long cable
lengths and without analog artifacts, multi-channel digital surround sound,
components that automatically adjust to optimal settings, and the ability of
the consumer to control multiple home theater components through a single
remote. As with DVI, HDMI supports the High-bandwidth Digital Content
Protection (HDCP) standard.
The first industry-supported uncompressed
all-digital audio/video interface, this HDMI to DVI-D cable provides an
interface between any audio/video source such as a set-top box DVD player
and A/V receiver and an audio and/or video monitor such as a digital
television (DTV). HDMI supports standard enhanced or high-definition video
plus multi-channel digital audio on a single cable.