Luminous Landscape Forum
Raw & Post Processing, Printing => Colour Management => Topic started by: Garnick on October 07, 2020, 09:26:09 am
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A friend has just bought a new display for his photo work. It appears that the cable included is HDMI and a DVI cable is optional. Since I've never used an HDMI cable for such a connection I cannot give him as much information as I would like to do. Therefore I'd like to receive some opinions concerning this issue. Perhaps not an issue at all, but that's the information I need.
Any and all replies would be much appreciated ;D
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I've never encountered any difficulties using HDMI for high resolution photo displays. You may want to read the Wikipedia entry, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI, particularly the "Compatibility with DVI" section.
Richard Southworth
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Lots of new video cards only have Display Port and HDMI connections. The last two NVIDIA cards I used in builds were that way.
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Thanks for the information gentlemen. I think that's just about all I need for this topic :D 8)
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What is the difference between the two? I'd like to know.
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A thread I read somewhere else explained that the data transmission protocol on HDMI can compress the video data, losing some detail in very brights and darks, if the bandwidth needed by the display is encountering the limits of the cable. HDMI version 2.1 is when this feature was added. If your display (like mine, Asus PA279) only supports a lower version of HDMI then compression cannot happen.
DVI and DisplayPort do not have any feature to compress video so they will always be accurate.
Now perhaps this compression might only happen on very large displays, 4K or 8K movies with surround sound also in the HDMI cable, but we don't need the HDMI connection to start creating problems itself!
Andy
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The video signal in HDMI and DVI are electrically the equivalent. HDMI includes various audio formats to support home entertainment A/V systems.
The second sentence in the second paragraph of the Wikipedia HDMI article (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI) states this clearly.
CEA-861 signals carried by HDMI are electrically compatible with the CEA-861 signals used by the Digital Visual Interface (DVI). No signal conversion is necessary, nor is there a loss of video quality when a DVI-to-HDMI adapter is used
-louie
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What is the difference between the two? I'd like to know.
Try using Goggle; the answer awaits you.
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A friend has just bought a new display for his photo work. It appears that the cable included is HDMI and a DVI cable is optional. Since I've never used an HDMI cable for such a connection I cannot give him as much information as I would like to do. Therefore I'd like to receive some opinions concerning this issue. Perhaps not an issue at all, but that's the information I need.
Any and all replies would be much appreciated ;D
This can depend on the type of display and how it communicates (if it does) with the computer for onboard calibration. For example, NEC SpectraViews do this and have recommendations on which to use as outlined here:
https://update.sharpnecdisplays.us/spectraview/NEC_SpectraView_README_MacOS_v1_1_40_EN.html
So, it depends. What kind of display is he using, the OS etc?
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Try using Goggle; the answer awaits you.
People can’t ask questions and get answers here?
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People can’t ask questions and get answers here?
Depends on the people and their inability to accept correct answers. Some have a massive history and agenda of asking questions without the ability to accept them.