ඔන්න මම ආයෙමත් ආවා. අලුත්ම නිව්ස් එකක් හොයාගෙන. HDMI කිව්වම හැමෝම දන්නවනේ මම මේ මොකක් ගැනද කියන්න යන්නේ කියලා. ඉතින් මේ HDMI 1.4 තමයි මෑතක් වෙනකන්ම භාවිතා උනේ ඔන්න දැන් එයාලා 2.0 හදුන්වා දීලා. ඉහතින් මේකේ තියන විශේෂ දේවල් ටික පල්ලෙහා දීලා තියන වීඩියෝ එකෙන් බලා ගන්න පුළුවන්.
ඉතින් මීට අමතරව HDMI 1.4 වලට සාපේක්ෂව HDMI 2.0 වල තියන අනිත් වැඩ ටික,,,,,,,
HDMI 2.0 vs 1.4: The basics
HDMI 2.0 was announced as a standard in late 2013. It got a lot of people confused, wondering if they suddenly needed to throw away their TVs in order to get on this latest tech trend.
As far as tech advancements go, HDMI 2.0 is a pretty friendly one. It’s as much a standard of software as hardware, and cables designed for HDMI 1.4 systems will work just fine with new HDMI 2.0 devices.
What you need to make sure is that both ends of your entertainment chain – your TV and blu-ray player, for example – support the standard. It’ll mean they’re geared up for the new standards we’ll dig into shortly. Some previously HDMI 1.4 hardware needs nothing more than a firmware update.
HDMI 2.0 is a reimagining of the interchange between your bits of home entertainment gear, one that factors in the immense amount of data required to get high-quality audio and video to something like a 4K 3D-capable TV.
Give it a year or so and 1080p TVs won’t even feel current anymore. We’re already starting to see 4K sets fall under the £650. It won’t be long before the rubbish 1080p LCD TVs at Tesco are replaced by rubbish 4K ones. Exciting times ahead.
HDMI 2.0 itself isn’t really about resolution, though, but bandwidth. More bandwidth is what makes all of its new standards possible. HDMI 2.0 systems can transfer data at up to 18Gbps, up from 10.2Gbps in HDMI 1.4.
In terms we’re all more likely to get on with, 18Gbps is 2,250MB a second. For a little more context, normal Blu-rays max out at 54Mbps, or 6.75MB per second. The HDMI pipe is wider than a dual carriageway.
Than you boss......
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