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Topic:
HDMI over any pair of wires
This thread has 29 replies. Displaying posts 1 through 15.
Post 1 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 14:47
Ernie Gilman
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Altinex is pleased to announce that we are able to send 1080p/60 HDMI signal over any type of wire. And when I say any, I mean any. We called this system “Anywire.”

Their publicity is ahead of their site maintenance, so you can't use their search engine to find the product yet, but it's at [Link: altinex.com].

When I first heard about this, I accused Altinex of being late to deliver their April Fools' product, especially when I could not find the information on the internet. But they say it's real.

Enjoy.
A good answer is easier with a clear question giving the make and model of everything.
"The biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place." -- G. “Bernie” Shaw
Post 2 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 15:31
gwstudios
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This could be amazing if it actually works.
Post 3 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 16:32
Audiophiliac
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Brilliant.

I wonder if anyone is working on powerline carrier transmission for HDMI yet. :P
"When I eat, it is the food that is scared." - Ron Swanson
Post 4 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 16:55
Brad Humphrey
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1080p/60Hz up to 300 meters distance on lamp cord?

Until I see this work and work consistently, I call BS. This is like that flaky field terminated HDMI ends, that manufacture marketing were insisting worked so well. Total BS!
Post 5 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 17:03
tweeterguy
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I wonder if this works better than the $9 1x2 HDMI splitters we've been using from Amazon?  I cannot figure out why they don't work reliably!

Post 6 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 17:06
edizzle
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WTF?
I love supporting product that supports me!
Post 7 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 17:40
Audiophiliac
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That HDMI splitter looks like it has a better chance of working than this thing a client handed me once. It was a gift from his daughter who knew his new bluray player would not work since his AV receiver only had component video. She had good intentions, and started off looking smart. Needless to say, I humored him, and hooked it up to test it. :)

"When I eat, it is the food that is scared." - Ron Swanson
Post 8 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 21:36
Duct Tape
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On April 20, 2016 at 17:40, Audiophiliac said...
That HDMI splitter looks like it has a better chance of working than this thing a client handed me once. It was a gift from his daughter who knew his new bluray player would not work since his AV receiver only had component video. She had good intentions, and started off looking smart. Needless to say, I humored him, and hooked it up to test it. :)


I believe that is actually meant for a certain pc video card that can be configured to output analog video.
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Post 9 made on Wednesday April 20, 2016 at 23:29
Wozman
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There's no mention of HDCP anywhere, probably means only for use in signage and surveillance, ie: non-protected content only I suspect...
Post 10 made on Thursday April 21, 2016 at 02:51
WhiteVan Lifestyle
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Hmmmmm?????
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OP | Post 11 made on Thursday April 21, 2016 at 02:52
Ernie Gilman
Yes, That Ernie!
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On April 21, 2016 at 02:51, WhiteVan Lifestyle said...
Hmmmmm?????

I think you might have an open capacitor in your power supply.



On April 20, 2016 at 17:06, edizzle said...
WTF?

MTE.



My thoughts exactly.



I am, however, grinning at the power amp output type of binding posts they use. (I really did tell the guy from Altinex that I thought this was an April Fools product that they didn't deliver on time!)
A good answer is easier with a clear question giving the make and model of everything.
"The biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place." -- G. “Bernie” Shaw
Post 12 made on Thursday April 21, 2016 at 05:19
Mac Burks (39)
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The IE 7 power cord is a little suspect IMO. Since when have you seen anything other than cheapo round wall wart power for devices like this?

"A single transmitter is capable of driving up to 4 receivers using either 4 individual wire pairs over 300 m each, or by daisy chaining the receivers"

So if i daisy chain receivers i can transmit a source to 4 receivers using 2 wires of "any" type? You better test this before you spec it for a project lol.
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Post 13 made on Thursday April 21, 2016 at 12:19
FunHouse Texas
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On April 20, 2016 at 23:29, Wozman said...
There's no mention of HDCP anywhere, probably means only for use in signage and surveillance, ie: non-protected content only I suspect...

I emailed them and this is the response i got..

"Anywire provides full HDCP and EDID compliance. EDID is propagated from the display back to the transmitter. HDCP keys are exchanged as per HDCP specification."

if this is true they should focus next on cancer research....
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Post 14 made on Thursday April 21, 2016 at 12:44
buzz
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There is a nice detail -- The unit supports up to 12AWG NON POLARIZED wire. What is "polarized" wire? Is this what was used to manufacture directional audio cables? Will this device work on knob and tube wire? (A couple days ago I bumped into some that is still in use.)

And this is novel: "A single transmitter is capable of driving up to 4 receivers using either 4 individual wire pairs over 300 m each, or by daisy chaining the receivers. The only restriction being the wire pair from the transmitter to each receiver cannot be bundled together as crosstalk will occur."

I'm not sure how one can avoid some bundling in a practical situation.

Anyway, this whole scheme reminds me of the miracle data compression products that claimed to be able to compress the data on whole hard drives to a few hundred or thousand bytes. There were a few grand press releases, then silence -- probably after their CTO discovered math and computer science.

I like the delayed delivery of an April 1 product hypothesis.
Post 15 made on Thursday April 21, 2016 at 15:18
amirm
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Hi guys. Took a look at their manual and the answer as to how they are doing it pops out:



Two things:
1. There is lossy compression of HDMI to lower bit rate
2. They are using a powerline transceiver (PLC) which obviously works on non-twisted wire.

So it is likely that it would work. Question would be at what level of fidelity.
Amir
Founder, Madrona Digital, http://madronadigital.com
Founder, Audio Science Review, http://audiosciencereview.com
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