15 Foot HDMI 1.3a Category 2 Certified CL2 Rated Male to HDMI Male Premium Gold Plated Cable 3 Meter ROHS 1080P
15 Foot HDMI 1.3a Category 2 Certified Male to HDMI Male Premium Gold Plated Cable 2 Meter ROHS 1080P
The latest revision for HDMI doubles the bandwidth of the original and has opened the door
for a host of potential new advancements in Home Theater Audio/Video performance. New
features such a Deep Color, higher color gamut, and high resolution,
multi-channel audio formats like Dolby True HD and DTS-HD Master Audio will make higher
bandwidth demands than ever before. Equipment manufacturers are bringing out new devices
to take advantage of these new features.
Be ready for what the future has in store with our HDMI 1.3a cables. These cables have
been designed to meet the high bandwidth performance standards set by HDMI 1.3a. Monoprice
cables are constructed to the highest quality with full triple layer shielding from end to
end, strong, solid wire welds and the highest quality materials including high purity
copper, gold plated connectors and tin plated conduits.
Whats new in the HDMI 1.3 Specification?
Higher speed: Although all previous versions of HDMI have had more than enough bandwidth
to support all current HDTV formats, including full, uncompressed 1080p signals, HDMI 1.3
increases its single-link bandwidth to 340 MHz (10.2 Gbps) to support the demands of
future HD display devices, such as higher resolutions, Deep Color and high frame rates. In
addition, built into the HDMI 1.3 specification is the technical foundation that will let
future versions of HDMI reach significantly higher speeds.
Deep Color: HDMI 1.3 supports 10-bit, 12-bit and 16-bit (RGB or YCbCr) color depths, up
from the 8-bit depths in previous versions of the HDMI specification, for stunning
rendering of over one billion colors in unprecedented detail.
Broader color space: HDMI 1.3 adds support for x.v.Color (which is the
consumer name describing the IEC 61966-2-4 xvYCC color standard), which removes current
color space limitations and enables the display of any color viewable by the human eye.
New mini connector: With small portable devices such as HD camcorders and still cameras
demanding seamless connectivity to HDTVs, HDMI 1.3 offers a new, smaller form factor
connector option.
Lip Sync: Because consumer electronics devices are using increasingly complex digital
signal processing to enhance the clarity and detail of the content, synchronization of
video and audio in user devices has become a greater challenge and could potentially
require complex end-user adjustments. HDMI 1.3 incorporates automatic audio synching
capabilities that allows devices to perform this synchronization automatically with total
accuracy.
New HD loss less audio formats: In addition to HDMIs current ability to support
high-bandwidth uncompressed digital audio and all currently-available compressed formats
(such as Dolby® Digital and DTS®), HDMI 1.3 adds additional support for new loss less
compressed digital audio formats Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.
What products or applications will take advantage of new HDMI 1.3 capabilities?
According to announcements by manufacturers, new high-definition DVD formats (HD-DVD and
Blu-ray) and game machines (including the Sony PLAYSTATION® 3) will make use of
capabilities added in HDMI 1.3. Digital televisions will be able to present images that
are closer to real life than previously has been possible. These will include LCD TVs,
plasma displays and rear projection microdisplays. The PS3 was the first source product to
provide such high quality imagery to these displays. A wide array of new products
featuring the most advanced HDMI 1.3-enabled connectivity such as x.v.Color, Deep Color
and the finest high bit-rate audio have come to market from major players including Denon,
Mitsubishi, Onkyo, Panasonic, Pioneer, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, Toshiba and Yamaha, with more
products expected soon.
Is HDMI 1.3 backward compatible with prior releases of the HDMI spec and with DVI?
Yes, HDMI is fully backward compatible with all prior releases of the HDMI spec, as well
as DVI compliant devices.