HDMI Cable 2M (6 Feet)

Electronics : HDMI Cable 2M (6 Feet)

HDMI Cable 2M (6 Feet)

from: DVI Gear



 : HDMI Cable 2M (6 Feet)
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Binding: Electronics
Brand: DVI Gear
Color: Black
EAN: 0410000100189
Label: DVI Gear
Manufacturer: DVI Gear
Model: HDMI-2M
Native Resolution: 1080p
Publisher: DVI Gear
Studio: DVI Gear
Variation Description: Black
Warranty: 1 year warranty



Editorial Review:

Product DescriptionThese cables are designed to carry digital-only signals from a source to a display. Along with this, digital audio is transmitted over the HDMI cable, making it a versatile alternative to DVI.




Features:
  • HDMI Male to Male
  • Perfect for connecting your HDMI Monitors, A/V Receivers, and HDTV
  • Supports all HDMI Devices
  • Supports Resolutions up to 1440P
  • Fully HDCP compliant to provide highest level of signal quality













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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Completely satisfied
The speed of service and delivery was great and I highly recommend this seller and the sellers products.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - You get what you pay for...
Worked wonderfully for 2 weeks and then all of a sudden stopped working. Right in the middle of a movie. As the title of this review suggests, you get exactly what you pay for.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Great look price, great product.
I picked up component wires because I figured they'd look the same as an HDMI cable. I hooked them up and really wasn't impressed ( using a 32" 720p Samsung with upconverter dvd player). I paid way too much for the component cables so I didn't want to waste too much more money. So, I bought this HDMI cable. It's much better then the component cables in price and looks.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Better living with out the cost
HDMI 2M (6 Feet) Super High Resolution Cable Why spend a fortune through Best Buy or Monster. The quality is all the same and this is a fraction of the cost.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - apparently temperature sensitive
I purchased these hdmi cables from amazon based on a PC mag review saying "hey, don't waste your money. Cables are cables are cables." That's true. These work(ed) just GREAT
until my house got cold. I live in a cabin, actually, with only wood heat. and the night of the election, when I was GLUED to the TV, I lost video/audio at every crucial point. I thought it was weather interference with my dish, but then I discovered that if I changed inputs from hdmi to rca cables, everything was fine. There seems to be a correlation between the temperature of my house and the connection in the cable (my house gets really cold where the TV is, near a window and on an exterior wall).
So if you're in SoCal or Florida or Texas or somewhere that doesn't go below 50, buy the cables! If it's colder, HEAT YOUR HOUSE.



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I've heard it said by Dave Winer and many many others: if only Dean had reinvested half the money raised into the Internet, then ...

OK, so you're the Dean Campaign Chief Information Officer in August 2003. The money starts to roll in. $20 million over six months, $2-4 million per month.

What would you spend the money on?

  1. What does your monthly budget look like?
  2. What is your application and infrastructure portfolio?
  3. How much will you allocate to maintenance?
  4. You're building from scratch, so what problems do you hope to avoid through wise architecture?
  5. What are your big milestones?
  6. Who are your key vendors?

How do you spend in consonance with the campaign strategy?

  1. How will you use the Internet to bring offline voters into the campaign at the same numbers as radio or television broadcasts?
  2. What is your online strategy for responding to attack ads and opposition pundits in radio, television and print?
  3. Online community takes time to build and is very hard to organize geographically. What will you do to match the state-by-state primary schedule?
  4. What can you do with online services to serve the campaign in caucus states?
  5. You are preparing for Bush to launch in Spring 2004. What are your countermeasures to reach out to moderate Republicans online while the GOP uses its advanced voter email systems to barrage 200 million validated email addresses?
  6. How will you lower the cost-per-vote vs. the GOP?

Wikis are shedding their free-for-all reputation and getting down to business. We found four IT shops that are tapping enterprise wikis to transform some of their internal processes.
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The authors of the new book "Sex and War" talk with Wired Science how biology and technology have shaped violence and war in the past and likely will in the future.
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This is a first for yours truly--Wi-Fi from a commercial flight: I'm blogging from somewhere above 10,000 feet on Virgin America's press event flight to kick off its commercial launch of Internet in-flight Internet service. The flight is littered with e-celebrities and a few real ones (a couple of the great ensemble from 30 Rock are here). We're flying over the ocean. And the Gogo Internet service from Aircell seems to be working just fine. I've Twittered, I've IM'd, and I'm about to post this blog entry. (Success! Updated later.)

There are about 130-odd people aboard, and I should apparently recognize lots of people, but I am so unhip, as Douglas Adams once wrote, that it's a wonder my bum doesn't fall off. I was able to talk briefly with Dave Cush, the head of Virgin America, who is very keen on having this rolled out, and at some length with Jack Blumenstein, the head of Aircell. (I did a in-flight air-to-ground interview with Blumenstein for BoingBoingTV which I'll link to when my fine friends there have the segment edited and up.)

virgin_wifi_small.jpg

The service works as one might expect: Aircell has had months to troubleshoot problems via the American pilot, and we're flying right around San Francisco, so nothing unpredictable in the middle part of the country. In a quick test using Qwest's bandwidth tester, I was able to get 700 Kbps downstream--while there were 100 other people using the service, too.

This wasn't a commercial flight (it was technically a charter), but it was on a regular Virgin America Airbus 320 using Aircell's ground network. Some material was broadcast live from the plane to YouTube Live, which was hosting a simultaneous event on the ground at Fort Mason in San Francisco.

This is the first time I've used Internet service on a commercial plane. Back a few years ago, I was on a Connexion by Boeing press flight that used ground stations for the flight instead of the production satellite servers.

Virgin isn't the first domestic airline to launch Internet service; American Airlines has a pilot with 15 planes that have been in the air on cross country routes for nearly three months. But Virgin is poised to be the first airline to launch Wi-Fi fleet wide. Delta has made a commitment--and they have several hundred planes in the U.S.--but hasn't gotten its first bird launched with service. Alaska, Southwest, and JetBlue have various plans that seem to have been pushed into 2009.

(Photo courtesy Virgin America. I'm the guy in an oatmeal sweater holding a white MacBook up. Disclosure for clarity: I paid my own way to San Francisco for the event.)


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HDMI Cable 2M (6 Feet)

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