>> Do such devices exist, has anyone actually done this, and if so how
>> well did it work?
Currently I do not think there are any HDMI devices out there and I agree w/ you that it should be pretty easy to create one. I've spoken w/ a couple HD manufacturers about this exact question about a year ago and it was suggested to me that there were some technical difficulties in creating such a board, but there was interest in having one created.
You'd think it would be easy as HDMI is designed specifically for media and there are many devices out there already that take a HDMI input and if there are Windows drivers to support such a device, it might just be as easy as grabbing a off the shelf HDMI receiver and plugging it in.
Something like:
http://www.amazon.com/Sony-STRDH520-Channel-Receiver-Black/dp/B004NHCGJO/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1327811117&sr=1-1
However I haven't tried it, so I don't know if it'll be easy or not.
Carlton
SR
Good luck!!
Bevan
--- On Sat, 1/28/12, Carlton Guc <car...@stageresearch.com> wrote:
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Lindsay Smith
Seattle
Hi All,
Thanks in advance,
Kind Regards,
--
There are a number of HDMI audio extractors such as
http://www.extron.com/product/product.aspx?id=hae100&subtype=354&s=4,
http://www.crestron.com/resources/product_and_programming_resources/catalogs
_and_brochures/online_catalog/default.asp?jump=1&model=hd-da-2 and
http://www.atlona.com/Atlona-HDMI-Audio-De-Embedder-with-3D-Support.html.
The question might then be whether the computer lets you see and assign the
HDMI audio as 8 discrete digital audio channels.
Brad Weber
muse Audio Video
Marietta, GA
--Chris Dietze
Jack Hildwine
Gilbert, AZ
Hi All,
Thanks in advance,
Kind Regards,
--
That's our good friend HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content
Protection), a copy protection protocol build directly into HDMI. It
is likely that your laptop has a legacy implementation of HDCP that is
being rejected by the newer TV. I'd check to make sure there aren't
any firmware updates available for your video card.
All-in-all, this is another example of how current copy-protection
schemes, while doing little to prevent actual copyright infringement,
restricts lots of legitimate usage.
Cheers!
~joe
_________________________
Joe Wilson, ATD/Sound
Indian River State College
Adding one more "me too" to the
collective internet consciousness.
It could be HDCP and I've also read that based solely on the EDID that
Nvidia blacklists the device and mutes the audio for some
incompatibility issue. Part of the problem is the dearth of information.
These are consumer-class devices on a bidirectional link with
intelligence on both sides. I would hope for at least an error code or
message from either. I could get a Wireshark-like trace of the link and
figure it out myself but I expect plug-and-play.
There are HDMI logos on everything. In the end I blame hdmi.org as
they're apparently too busy licensing overpriced cables than ensuring
that the endpoints play together.
Jack
Cheers!
~joe
--
Here's some free software for reading and managing EDID information from
devices,
http://www.extron.com/product/software.aspx?id=edidmanager&search=EDID.
In one of the classes at last year's InfoComm the instructor mentioned how
they had purchased new monitors and found that they had to keep going into
the computer graphics card setup to get the computers to display correctly.
They finally figured out that the monitor manufacturer had apparently loaded
the EDID information from an older model that had a different native
resolution, thus the display was telling the computer to improperly
configure the graphics output.