![]() Once they leave the connector’s pins, signals travel via the HDMI® cable’s twisted-pair copper wires. ![]() Type A is by far the most widely used HDMI® on the market.“Type E” was used on some navigation systems in particular car models but on the back end. There is also “Type C” Mini HDMI® for tablets and “Type C” or “Micro” for smartphones. Then there was the rarer 29-pin “Type B” HDMI® connector available for some devices that isn’t in use anymore. Standard HDMI® connectors - otherwise known as “Type A” - transmit signals from a 19-pin configuration.The Ultra High Speed HDMI® Cable is backwards compatible with prior HDMI® devices and also has low EMI.Premium High Speed HDMI® Cables support 4K/UltraHD up to 18Gbps, as well as have low EMI or electromagnetic interference.There is a High Speed version cable with Ethernet and for Automotive. It is recommended for Blu-Ray™ and supports 3D and deep color formats. High Speed HDMI® supports greater than 1080p and up to 10.2Gbps bandwidth.There’s a version of this cable for Ethernet, with a channel specifically for data on this type of HDMI® Cable. ![]() These cables are backwards compatible with older resolutions and bandwidth but may not support updated resolutions and bandwidth. It works with 1080i or 720p video with eight channels of uncompressed audio. ![]() Short for High-Definition Multimedia Interface, there are several types of HDMI® Cables.Īmong them is Standard HDMI®. ![]() From streaming, HDTVs and high-end gaming systems to HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc™ players, the connection of choice for today’s high-definition electronics is clear: the HDMI® Cable. ![]()
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