A new standard for video and audio transfers may make HDMI obsolete. HDbaseT, which uses existing Ethernet cabling, promises to do everything HDMI does and more, and offer superior performance over larger distances as a bonus.
One of the problems with HDMI is what it was never really designed for long distance communication, due to lack of error correction and extension capabilities. HDbaseT, backed by Sony, Samsung, LG, and Valens Semiconductor, aims to solve this by using Ethernet cabling and enabling "hops" to extend the signal travel length to as long as 800m (8 x the 100m maximum for HDbaseT). And because HDbaseT uses traditional Ethernet cables (Cat 5e/6), cost for long runs is not an issue.
The single cable will carry video, audio, Internet and control signals the same way HDMI 1.4 cables can, and can even carry up to 100W of electricity to power remote devices and support for USB devices.
But HDbaseT's biggest problem is the dominance of HDMI as a standard, and even with the big names of Sony, Samsung and LG behind it, it will take a tremendous effort for HDbaseT to replace HDMI, or even to compete with formats like DisplayPort.
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One of the problems with HDMI is what it was never really designed for long distance communication, due to lack of error correction and extension capabilities. HDbaseT, backed by Sony, Samsung, LG, and Valens Semiconductor, aims to solve this by using Ethernet cabling and enabling "hops" to extend the signal travel length to as long as 800m (8 x the 100m maximum for HDbaseT). And because HDbaseT uses traditional Ethernet cables (Cat 5e/6), cost for long runs is not an issue.
The single cable will carry video, audio, Internet and control signals the same way HDMI 1.4 cables can, and can even carry up to 100W of electricity to power remote devices and support for USB devices.
But HDbaseT's biggest problem is the dominance of HDMI as a standard, and even with the big names of Sony, Samsung and LG behind it, it will take a tremendous effort for HDbaseT to replace HDMI, or even to compete with formats like DisplayPort.
More:
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