DocumentCode
757416
Title
The big hook up - The consumer electronics industry has found its success is all about connections
Author
Collins, Luke
Volume
5
Issue
1
fYear
2007
Firstpage
12
Lastpage
15
Abstract
The consumer electronics industry has found its success is all about connections. One of the biggest challenges at the moment is the sheer quantity of data that the more realistic digital video and console games systems produce. A high-definition TV datastream compressed for broadcast takes 19Mbit/s, while the data rate off a Blu-ray disc is 48Mbit/s. Once uncompressed, the datarates balloon. Version 1.2 of the high-definition multimedia interface (HDMI) standard, which defines the cable that connects a high-definition source such as a Blu-ray player to a display, carries 4.9Gbit/s. The HDMI 1.3 specification, which has just launched, offers 10.2Gbit/s of bandwidth, to support a 48bit rather than 24bit colour gamut, better audio, and better synchronisation between audio and video. The HDMI connector highlights another issue for designers, and particularly for those involved in developing connection systems that may become part of a standard. HDMI includes the Intel-derived high-definition copy protection (HDCP) scheme, which ensures that high-quality content is protected from source to screen
Keywords
consumer electronics; copy protection; electric connectors; high definition television; HDMI 1.3 specification; HDMI connector; console games systems; consumer electronics industry; digital video; high-definition TV; high-definition copy protection; high-definition multimedia interface connectors; high-quality content protection;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Electronics Systems and Software
Publisher
iet
ISSN
1479-8336
Type
jour
Filename
4140704
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