Demystifying HDMI's role in delivering hi-def
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Strange, I can read the whole thing without registering ...
Fake edit: just tried the link in FireFox, and I get the login page too. What I did was go to this page:
U.S. government agencies are closer to elimination of the Year 2000 computer bug, although key departments, including the Defense Department, are still making insufficient progress, the Office of M…
Then then clicked on the link to this story, which then allowed me to view the whole thing in FireFox without registering ...Comment
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The biggest problem is the copy protection technology called High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection, or HDCP. The fear of piracy, or even the possibility that a consumer might want to copy an HDTV program or a hi-def DVD (Blu-ray or HD DVD) he owns for portable use on an iPod-type device, has messed up HDMI.Comment
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Strange, I can read the whole thing without registering ...
Fake edit: just tried the link in FireFox, and I get the login page too. What I did was go to this page:
U.S. government agencies are closer to elimination of the Year 2000 computer bug, although key departments, including the Defense Department, are still making insufficient progress, the Office of M…
Then then clicked on the link to this story, which then allowed me to view the whole thing in FireFox without registering ...
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There is also the ICT component of HDCP, which has yet to be introduced - it's a flag on the high def disc that when turned on, will limit analogue output (eg. component) to 960x540 - that's just barely better than DVD. So far, studios have said they won't introduce ICT (and it would be a very unpopular decision to do so - considering the Xbox 360's HD DVD drive only has analogue output), but you can see their plan to shoe-horn everyone into the DRM infested HDMI format.
Sometimes all of this is like living in a really bad dream ... what ever happened to just putting a disc in and pressing play?Comment
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