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Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 20th 19, 02:50 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Jean Fredette
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Posts: 47
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

I was given a 23-inch diagonal monitor and desktop that has all three
colors (blue white & hdmi) and the desktop can output blue white or hdmi
but the owners who gave it to me couldn't find the cables.

Does it matter in the "quality" of the end result which cable I buy?
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  #2  
Old March 20th 19, 03:04 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
😉 Good Guy 😉
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Posts: 1,483
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

On 20/03/2019 01:50, Jean Fredette wrote:
I was given a 23-inch diagonal monitor and desktop that has all three
colors (blue white & hdmi) and the desktop can output blue white or hdmi
but the owners who gave it to me couldn't find the cables.

Does it matter in the "quality" of the end result which cable I buy?


What is this blue white thing you are talking about? If you want just a
cable for hdmi output then go and buy the one with gold plated
connectors. Cables are pretty cheap these days so go and buy any IMO as
long as they are called HDMI!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.

Is this the first time you are trying to connect a monitor to your
desktop? the monitor must have a VGA connection as well which will work
like what has been used so far by many people. HDMI is supposed to give
you a clearer picture but most people don't even notice it as long as
there is some output to work with.

You just need to cut the crap and stop talking about "diagonal monitor"
because they are all monitors. Never heard of a diagonal monitor; you
will need to turn your head to read something on the screen if it is
diagonal!!! After sometime you'll get tired of doing it.

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From: Jean Fredette
Newsgroups: alt.windows7.general
Subject: Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor
Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2019 20:50:55 -0500
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  #3  
Old March 20th 19, 03:36 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Paul[_32_]
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Posts: 11,873
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

Jean Fredette wrote:
I was given a 23-inch diagonal monitor and desktop that has all three
colors (blue white & hdmi) and the desktop can output blue white or hdmi
but the owners who gave it to me couldn't find the cables.

Does it matter in the "quality" of the end result which cable I buy?


With this amount of info to go on, I'd take HDMI, because "it works".

If you want additional feedback:

1) Provide the monitor make and model number. E.g. Acer MX123 or Asus 97GX
This allows reviewing the native resolution we're trying to hit
(which is likely 1920x1080). And perhaps the Internet has a picture
of the back of the item.

2) If you provide the information about the driving video card itself,
that allows heading off trouble. This is usually harder for posters
to dig up, unless they hold onto the video card box when they buy one.
The only reason in this case, that we care, is if the video card is
an AGP one, from when NVidia made their first cards with digital output,
there's a couple card models which only do 135MHz clock, when the spec
says they should work out to 165MHz. This might prevent such a card
from reaching 1920x1080 perhaps, and you might consider using a VGA
output in such an (obscure) case. My NVidia 7900GT for example, I don't
think I have any accurate identifiers on it, and Device Manager tells
you "7900GT/7900GTX", so it won't say specifically what it is. Then
I might attempt to use GPU-Z from Techspot.

The chances of you being screwed on (2) are slim to none.

If you have really old video cards, ancient ones from when dual
head first came out, the second connector on those might only
do 1024x768, but you're not likely to have something that
ancient on a Windows 7 computer. There could be corner cases.
We were able to buy ATI 7000 video cards for years and years,
so there was rubbish in the retail channel for a long long time
(i.e. unlikely to be able to still find specs for it).

But if you have HDMI at both ends in front of you, then
that is highly likely to be "the answer". To get the best
price, don't buy those locally. Unless you have a Frys maybe.
I could see you paying $25 for a $3 cable with some
"Monster" branding on it, and gold-tinted connectors.

*******

If you want to use 25 feet of HDMI cable, then you're going to
need a higher quality cable. It is possible to run some
distance, but you might not get it right on your first
purchase. The higher the resolution, the higher the clock
rate, and the harder it is to get decent signal amplitude
on a really long cable. You could likely send 1024x768 @ 60Hz over
HDMI a good long distance. Sending 4K at 144Hz via a modern
HDMI standard, less so.

HTH,
Paul
  #5  
Old March 20th 19, 05:11 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Paul[_32_]
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Posts: 11,873
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

pjp wrote:
In article ,
says...
I was given a 23-inch diagonal monitor and desktop that has all three
colors (blue white & hdmi) and the desktop can output blue white or hdmi
but the owners who gave it to me couldn't find the cables.

Does it matter in the "quality" of the end result which cable I buy?


Almost surely not. Same as old days and stereos with the gold plated
cables which are no better than regular quality made cables at 10X the
price. Signal is only electrons and they either can or can't traverse
the cable.


There is the skin effect, and where the currents for a
high frequency signals travel.

But usually, the precious metals tinting cables, are
on the business ends, and not in the part buried under
the plastic insulation. Just plain copper under there
would be more the norm. When I started in the business, lots
of stuff was nickel plated, but that isn't a popular practice
any more. The nickel plating stopped corrosion or oxidation.

A cable could have conductive loss as well as dielectric loss.
It's just possible the dielectric choice is more significant
than the outside conductor finish. HDMI cables do seem to differ
in dielectric loss, so there must be some differences in the "goo"
inside coaxial or biaxial sections. High speed signals
tend to be differential, and it helps if the environment
the signals move through, are "equal".

https://i.postimg.cc/k4bt1qWb/HDMI-c...ss-section.gif

The main diff pairs there are R,G,B, and CLK. The CLK being
one tenth the rate of the data waveforms. By sending a LF clock,
you can synthesize up a sampling clock from it, then phase
shift it dynamically to keep it centered. I have no idea
what the "training method" is on that standard. And how often
it might recalibrate.

When the signal launches, it's low amplitude. Let's pretend
for the same of argument, it is 1 volt tall. As the signal
moves down the HDMI cable, it shrinks in height. If might
be 0.05 volt high at the receiving end. The receiver thresholds
are just barely sensitive enough, to reliably detect that
signal. If you make the cable longer, the slicing action
will be off, the signals will start to get "fuzzy", the
eye opening will close, and the image will start to get
"colored snow" from the transmission errors. If you double
the length of the cable, so little "intelligence" will be
sensed in the cable, you lose "sync". Then the screen goes dark.

Paul
  #6  
Old March 20th 19, 09:09 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Jean Fredette
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Posts: 47
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

Paul posted:

1) Provide the monitor make and model number. E.g. Acer MX123 or Asus 97GX


On the front it says LG FLATRON E2341.
On the back, it says LG Flatron E2341V-BN, model E2341V, December 2011.

The computer has blue (vga), white (dvi), and dark (hdmi).
The monitor also has a headphone jack but I don't see speakers anywhere.

I don't see a jack for sound input to the monitor.
Where does it get the sound for the headphone from?

2) If you provide the information about the driving video card itself,
I might attempt to use GPU-Z from Techspot.


Do you mean techspot or techpowerup?
https://www.techspot.com/downloads/5...u-monitor.html
https://www.techpowerup.com/download/gpu-z/

I couldn't get the techspot to download so I used techpowerup.
NVIDIA GeForce 201
Driver version 9.18.13.4174 (NVIDIA 341.74)
  #7  
Old March 20th 19, 09:09 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Jean Fredette
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Posts: 47
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

pjp posted:

gold plated cables which are no better than regular quality made cables


Its the quality of the output on the monitor screen that I was asking about
for the three possible formats (not the cable quality).
blue vga
white dvi
dark hdmi

And I was also wondering about how it gets the sound since I don't see any
speakers but it has a headphone output but I don't see any sound input.

The monitor is an LG Flatron E2341.
  #8  
Old March 20th 19, 10:53 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Paul[_32_]
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Posts: 11,873
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

Jean Fredette wrote:
Paul posted:

1) Provide the monitor make and model number. E.g. Acer MX123 or Asus 97GX


On the front it says LG FLATRON E2341.
On the back, it says LG Flatron E2341V-BN, model E2341V, December 2011.

The computer has blue (vga), white (dvi), and dark (hdmi).
The monitor also has a headphone jack but I don't see speakers anywhere.

I don't see a jack for sound input to the monitor.
Where does it get the sound for the headphone from?

2) If you provide the information about the driving video card itself,
I might attempt to use GPU-Z from Techspot.


Do you mean techspot or techpowerup?
https://www.techspot.com/downloads/5...u-monitor.html
https://www.techpowerup.com/download/gpu-z/

I couldn't get the techspot to download so I used techpowerup.
NVIDIA GeForce 201
Driver version 9.18.13.4174 (NVIDIA 341.74)


That's a 1920x1080 monitor, and either HDMI or DVI would be sufficient.
DVI single lane works to 1920x1200 @ 60Hz CRTRB (reduced blanking), so
covers 1920x1080 OK.

At that resolution, VGA would still work, but might be slightly
less good than the digital ones.

You can then decide, which cable is cheaper, between DVI and HDMI,
as electrically they could work with a single lane.

*******

Yes, this is probably what I was thinking about.

https://www.techpowerup.com/download/gpu-z/

It's probably a Geforce 210. And you're lucky to get this from
the VGA perspective, as in 2018, VGA kinda disappeared from
video card faceplates. In 2019, people will be buying active
adapters, to go from HDMI to VGA or DisplayPort to VGA. Your
card is still fully functional, by the looks of it. But VGA is
likely a better choice at more pedestrian resolutions like
1600x1200. Pushing it all the way to 2048 would be kinda nutty
and wouldn't look too good. The two digital standards tend
to keep their quality (with short cable, good quality cable).

https://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...9SIA6ZP3R86688

1 x VGA 2048x1536
1 x DL-DVI-I Dual Link DVI 2560x1600 or
VGA via passive adapter at 2048x1536.
1 x HDMI (1.3A claimed by one source...)

You'll notice as well, that NVidia absolutely refuses to tell
us what HDMI standards version that implements. It has to do
1920x1080 at least. 1920x1080 relies on an HDMI clock of 165MHz,
same as DVI. But later standards of HDMI have faster clocks,
like 330MHz, and that's where the higher resolutions come from.
Knowing a card has DVI and the DVI does 165MHz (its final limit),
we know the HDMI has to be at least that good.

https://www.geforce.com/hardware/des...specifications
https://www.nvidia.in/object/product...ce_210_in.html

The review here seems to be claiming it is HDMI 1.3a, and has
8 channel LPCM audio over HDMI capability. I'm not sure that
people in the field were seeing this, but this is the
"chartware" from NVidia. For some reason, the HDMI version
is suppressed in adverts. Like, maybe it's broken or something.
You don't suppress a spec like that, unless you're ashamed of
something.

https://www.pcper.com/reviews/Graphi...-hit-consumers

And HDMI 1.3a here, has a clock of 330MHz. That's the "transportation
equivalent" of dual-link DVI. Two DVI in parallel at 165MHz, is the
same as the one lane on HDMI running at 330MHz. Which means in theory,
2560x1600 @ 60Hz should be in reach.

With that out of the way, you can use either the DVI or HDMI.
And because the video card connector is DVI-I, there should
not be a cabling problem. Some later cards, like a 2018 card
stripped of all VGA, the connector on the video card end
is DVI-D and the VGA blade slots are filled in with plastic.

If using the DVI cable, you want to verify both ends,
whether they're DVI-D or DVI-I, look at the cable carefully
to ensure there isn't a conflict. I don't expect a problem,
but sometimes "stuff happens". The video card end on your
card, appears to support "any cable".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Visual_Interface

The monitor end looks DVI-D. DVI-D on both ends should work.

https://i.postimg.cc/Z5YM0qrL/looks-dvi-d.jpg

Paul
  #9  
Old March 20th 19, 11:03 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Paul[_32_]
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Posts: 11,873
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

Jean Fredette wrote:
pjp posted:

gold plated cables which are no better than regular quality made cables


Its the quality of the output on the monitor screen that I was asking about
for the three possible formats (not the cable quality).
blue vga
white dvi
dark hdmi

And I was also wondering about how it gets the sound since I don't see any
speakers but it has a headphone output but I don't see any sound input.

The monitor is an LG Flatron E2341.


Audio over HDMI.

The claim is, your video card barely has it. (Audio provided as of
that version of HDMI. 8 channel LPCM.)

NVidia was originally a bit lazy. They put an SPDIF connector
at the top edge of their video cards, and you were supposed
to run a cable from the motherboard, over to the video card.
Your Geforce 210 is supposed to have an actual HDAudio digital
source to drive that function instead. The video card driver
package should mention it also contains an audio driver file.
In Windows, you select "HDMI audio" or at least select some
other option besides the ones your sound card is providing.

The monitor, if it has a headphone jack, could extract
2-channel LPCM from HDMI and send it to the headphone jack.
A headphone jack is usually good for a 32 ohm load (i.e. not
enough to drive some 100W 2 ohm speakers :-) ) The DVI
might not support that, hard to be certain what comes
out of the DVI port.

That gives the HDMI cable a slight edge, in terms of
"fun factor" and "what-if".

Paul
  #10  
Old March 20th 19, 12:41 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
NY
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Posts: 586
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

"Jean Fredette" wrote in message
...
I was given a 23-inch diagonal monitor and desktop that has all three
colors (blue white & hdmi) and the desktop can output blue white or hdmi
but the owners who gave it to me couldn't find the cables.

Does it matter in the "quality" of the end result which cable I buy?


I interpret "white" as being DVI and "blue" as being VGA, since those seem
to the industry-standard colours for the plastic insert with the pinholes in
it (in the socket) and the plastic shroud (on the plug).

Good question: faced with a graphics card that can produce all three outputs
(at the same resolution) and a monitor that can accept all three inputs, is
there a preference for HDMI over DVI over VGA? I'm assuming digital, not
analogue, outputs on DVI and VGA, so different contact resistance will not
cause colour cast or missing colour, and cable capacitance will not cause
ghosting/blurring.

I suppose one advantage of HDMI is that the same cable can also carry the
sound.

  #11  
Old March 20th 19, 03:56 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Jean Fredette
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Posts: 47
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

Paul posted:

You can then decide, which cable is cheaper, between DVI and HDMI,
as electrically they could work with a single lane.


If that's the choice then I'll get HDMI since I might need it in the
future. The price of the cable isn't an issue I care about. I just want to
choose the right cable type since the GeForce 210 and Flatron E2341 have 3
choices.

It's probably a Geforce 210.


You are right. I must have transposed the letters.
I checked GPU-Z again where it's a GeForce 210 as you said.

The two digital standards tend
to keep their quality (with short cable, good quality cable).


I was thinking six feet or maybe ten feet as four is too short I think.

The desktop will sit on the floor to the side of the monitor where the
cable has to snake around the desk a bit to get to the monitor down below.

The review here seems to be claiming it is HDMI 1.3a, and has
8 channel LPCM audio over HDMI capability.


I think what you're saying is that the hdmi will carry the audio to the
headphone jack of the LG Flatron E2341 monitor but the DVI will not?

With that out of the way, you can use either the DVI or HDMI.


Thank you for that research where both will work.
Did I correctly read you that the DVI does not carry the audio?

I think from what you wrote, I'll buy a 6 or 10 foot hdmi cable where the
main difference is only that the hdmi carries audio?

My main confusion is that I think you said the dvi has slightly better
resolution under some circumstances? But I am just using it for normal
things where the basic good resolution should be ok for me.
  #12  
Old March 20th 19, 04:28 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Ken Blake[_5_]
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Posts: 2,221
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

On Wed, 20 Mar 2019 03:09:21 -0500, Jean Fredette
wrote:

Paul posted:

1) Provide the monitor make and model number. E.g. Acer MX123 or Asus 97GX


On the front it says LG FLATRON E2341.
On the back, it says LG Flatron E2341V-BN, model E2341V, December 2011.

The computer has blue (vga), white (dvi), and dark (hdmi).
The monitor also has a headphone jack but I don't see speakers anywhere.




Jacks for loudspeakers are usually on the computer, not the monitor.

  #13  
Old March 20th 19, 06:40 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Jean Fredette
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Posts: 47
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

Ken Blake posted:

Jacks for loudspeakers are usually on the computer, not the monitor.


I followed Paul's advice which activated the monitor headphone jack.

The output with both the vga & hdmi cable was the same at 1920x1080.
With hdmi I also get sound out of the headphone jack on the monitor.

I found switching to sound outputs was different than I expected.
I had expected that merely plugging in the headphone jack would instantly
disable the speakers, which is what happens with my external speakers
(which also have a headphone jack).

That would have been a problem with this monitor because just to plug in
the headphone jack requires more effort than you want to turn the monitor
around, flip it upside down, and find the tiny headphone port in a crevice.

I was worried that it's pretty hard to insert the headphone jack into the
back bottom crevice of the Flatron E2341 monitor so I was very happy to
find out that there is a software choice to switch between 3 outputs

E2341 (NVIDIA High Definition Audio)
Speakers (High Definition Audio Device)
Digital Audio (S/PDIF)(High Definition Audio Device)

The first of those 3 switches audio to the headphone jack on the monitor.
It's nice that this has a software control so that I can leave the
headphones plugged into the monitor full time.

The second switches to the external speakers I connected to the desktop,
where the sound plays out the speaker if no headphone is connected to those
external speakers, but the sound output automatically switches in hardware
to headphones if I connect them to those external speakers. So I can't
leave the headphones plugged into the external speakers full time.

I have no idea what the third choice switches to though.
  #14  
Old March 20th 19, 08:45 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
NY
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Posts: 586
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

"Ken Blake" wrote in message
news
Jacks for loudspeakers are usually on the computer, not the monitor.


Although some monitors have a pass-though connector, so you connect PC to
monitor in which feeds a monitor out socket that headphones/microphones cane
be plugged into. The same applies to USB: some have a square input socket
for the lead from the computer and then one or more flat-USB output sockets
for devices to be plugged into.

In the case of loudspeaker socket on the monitor it may even play sound
through the monitor's speakers but mute that if headphones are plugged into
the monitor's socket.

In both cases, you are taking advantage of the monitor's sockets being more
accessible that the corresponding ones on the PC if that is under a desk.

  #15  
Old March 20th 19, 10:43 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Paul[_32_]
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Posts: 11,873
Default Blue, white, and HDMI cables for a 23-inch diagonal monitor

Jean Fredette wrote:
Paul posted:

You can then decide, which cable is cheaper, between DVI and HDMI,
as electrically they could work with a single lane.


If that's the choice then I'll get HDMI since I might need it in the
future. The price of the cable isn't an issue I care about. I just want to
choose the right cable type since the GeForce 210 and Flatron E2341 have 3
choices.

It's probably a Geforce 210.


You are right. I must have transposed the letters.
I checked GPU-Z again where it's a GeForce 210 as you said.

The two digital standards tend
to keep their quality (with short cable, good quality cable).


I was thinking six feet or maybe ten feet as four is too short I think.

The desktop will sit on the floor to the side of the monitor where the
cable has to snake around the desk a bit to get to the monitor down below.

The review here seems to be claiming it is HDMI 1.3a, and has
8 channel LPCM audio over HDMI capability.


I think what you're saying is that the hdmi will carry the audio to the
headphone jack of the LG Flatron E2341 monitor but the DVI will not?

With that out of the way, you can use either the DVI or HDMI.


Thank you for that research where both will work.
Did I correctly read you that the DVI does not carry the audio?

I think from what you wrote, I'll buy a 6 or 10 foot hdmi cable where the
main difference is only that the hdmi carries audio?

My main confusion is that I think you said the dvi has slightly better
resolution under some circumstances? But I am just using it for normal
things where the basic good resolution should be ok for me.


1) All ports have roughly the same resolution choices,
give or take a bit. At least in the current situation
all are theoretically better than is needed for the
1920x1080 application at 60Hz. I'd have to be more careful
shooting from the hip, if your monitor was 144Hz (gamer monitor).

We don't like to push VGA too far, because the cabling is the
issue with VGA. The connector design isn't suited to "high frequency
signaling". So just picking a figure out of the air, I suggest
that maybe 1600x1200 is the point at which the digital ones
might start looking better, and VGA is running out of steam.
At 1024x768, you likely couldn't tell the difference between
VGA and HDMI.

2) HDMI appears to have audio in this case. But for the time,
this might have been the first generation of low end card
with the audio integrated. A previous generation used SPDIF
passthru, with the HDMI standard unaltered and having "slots"
for 8 channel audio.

3) I can see reports of "funny things happening" with the audio
over DVI. It appears it can work.

https://forums.tomsguide.com/threads...gh-dvi.233582/

The hard part, would be digging up a technical backing for it.

The "swapping connectors thing" started before audio carriage
existed.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Visual_Interface

"For example, an HDMI display can be driven by a DVI-D source
because HDMI and DVI-D both define an overlapping minimum set
of supported resolutions and frame buffer formats.

Some DVI-D sources use non-standard extensions to output HDMI
signals including audio (e.g. ATI 3000-series and
NVIDIA GTX 200-series).[9] Some multimedia displays use a
DVI to HDMI adapter to input the HDMI signal with audio.
Exact capabilities vary by video card specifications."

To me, where this might "break", is if the monitor was
2560x1600 and used dual-link DVI, I doubt the audio would
work over that, because the "overlap of standards" no longer
works when dual lanes are needed on DVI carriage. But in
your case, a 165MHz clock on a single TMDS (transition minimized
differential signaling) interface, means "easy swapping" via passive
connector conversion. There's sufficient overlap of standards
at 1920x1080 for this to be possible. The monitor also plays a
part, if say, the designer chose to be picky and "only supported
legacy (no audio) data extraction" on the DVI.

If you had an Apple 30" Cinema display with speakers, this
would be a much more iffy proposition, because you'd need two
lanes on the DVI to work.

But the above information suggests "it could happen" at 1920x1080.

The Wikipedia article refers to EDID as well, and both HDMI and
DVI have EDID (monitor declares what it supports), so that
should work on both of them. HDMI has additional functions
with the extra wires it's got, such as CEC for switching
equipment off. On a TV set, if you hit the power button,
using CEC the BluRay player would power down, because
the TV would tell the BluRay player "we won't be needing
you now". That channel doesn't exist on DVI, so a DVI to
HDMI adapter would have no signal to drive that pin. There
might be a similar issue with audio return channel or something,
which isn't an issue in this case. Audio return channel is
more of a home theater issue. These are examples of pins
not driven, when a DVI to HDMI is used.

HDMI

Pin 13 CEC (Consumer Electronics Control extensions, power down)
Pin 14

Reserved (HDMI 1.0–1.3a)
Utility/HEAC+ (HDMI 1.4+, optional, HDMI Ethernet Channel
and Audio Return Channel)

Paul


 




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