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| Products Application > What is HDMI? |
What is HDMI?
HDMI
stands for High-Definition Multimedia Interface, and that's a pretty good
description of what it is. In layman's terms, HDMI is a type of digital
connection that's capable of transmitting high-definition video and
high-resolution audio over a single cable. To do the same thing with analog
cables, you'd need to connect three component-video cables plus six analog audio
cables--that's a whole lot of cable clutter.
HDMI is typically used to connect a high-definition device--such as an HD DVR--to
an HDTV. To make the connection, you simply put one end of the cable into the
HDTV's HDMI input slot and the other end into the device's HDMI output slot. And
that's it--just one cable and you're all set for the high-definition experience.
If you have an AV receiver, just put it in the middle of the signal chain. The
output of the AV receiver goes to the HDTV and you connect your high-definition
device(s) to the AV receiver's input.
How does it compare to other cable types?
HDMI can deliver the best image quality of any of the cable types available
today. It can handle high-definition video of up to 1080p resolution at 60
frames per second, which is the most bandwidth-intensive video format currently
available. The older PC-based DVI connection offers equivalent quality, but it
is rarely available on HDTVs or video components these days. Component video is
found on nearly all electronics that output high-def video, and its image
quality is slightly lower than HDMI, but it's really difficult for most people
to tell the difference. Many viewers are probably familiar with the quality
associated with the various standard-definition video cables--namely S-Video,
composite (the yellow video cable), and RF--and HDMI provides a potentially huge
improvement over all of them. As always, however, the biggest factor in video
quality is the source; a low-quality source delivered over HDMI will still look
worse than a high-quality source over S-Video.
For audio, HDMI is the reigning king of quality as well. It supports the
ability to carry eight channels of 24-bit audio at 192kHz--enough to handle even
the highest resolution audio soundtracks such as Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master
Audio. The only other connection type that can deliver the same quality are
multichannel analog audio cables, but you'd need to run as many as eight
separate cables to get the same quality. Digital audio cables--both optical and
coaxial--can deliver multichannel audio, but are limited to lower-resolution
audio signals.
Where else is HDMI used?
As with USB, there's also a mini HDMI port that is more and more commonly found
on high-def camcorders. It offers the same benefits as HDMI, but the smaller
size of the port makes it easier to include on portable gadgets. You can connect
electronics with mini HDMI ports to an HDTV using a cable that has a mini HDMI
connecter at one end and standard HDMI connection on the other, like this one.
You can also use a standard HDMI cable and a mini HDMI adapter.

The mini HDMI connector is still pretty rare, but it is found on some high-def
camcorders.
While DVI is still the standard on PCs, there are several new desktops and
graphic cards that feature HDMI ports. While HDMI looks to be pretty much
uncontested for home theater electronics for years to come, it does face
competition in the computer field, as we expect DisplayPort to be seen on some
systems in 2008. There's also another competing connection type, UDI, but that's
still further off in the future.
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