Comments on: Get a 6-foot HDMI cable for $3.19 shipped
No, it's not made of yarn or fishing wire. This is the real deal, perfect for connecting your Xbox 360, Blu-ray player, or whatever to your HDTV. You could pay more, but why?
No, it's not made of yarn or fishing wire. This is the real deal, perfect for connecting your Xbox 360, Blu-ray player, or whatever to your HDTV. You could pay more, but why?
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
The best things in tech are cheap. "The Cheapskate" scours the Web for great deals on PCs, phones, gadgets, and all the other tech stuff that makes life worth living. Send your own cheapskate tips to thecheapskate@gmail.com. Rick is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. Deals found on The Cheapskate are subject to availability, expiration, and other terms determined by sellers.
Add this feed to your online news reader
Most of them work, but I've had about a 75% success rate. I'd rather buy 10 of these than 1 of the other!
Great Deal like I said but it sucks for me because I'm going to college and will be poor soon (no xbox, no flatscreen to plug my laptop, etc.)
I'd rather risk $3 (eforcity has awesome customer service) than waste $40+ at bestbuy.
HDMI is digital, so either signal gets there or it doesn't. It is not like analog where signal degradation affects quality.
The latest revision for HDMI doubles the bandwidth of the original and has opened the door for a host of potential new advancements in Home Theater Audio/Video performance. New features such a ?Deep Color,? higher color gamut, and high resolution, multi-channel audio formats like Dolby True HD and DTS-HD Master Audio will make higher bandwidth demands than ever before. Category 2 testing ensures that the standard set by this new requirements are adhered to. Be ready for what the future has in store with our Monoprice HDMI 1.3a, Category 2 certified cables. These cables have been designed to meet the high bandwidth performance standards set by HDMI 1.3a and has passed stringent Category 2 testing. Monoprice cables are constructed to the highest quality with full triple layer shielding from end to end, strong, solid wire welds and the highest quality materials including high purity copper, gold plated connectors and tin plated conduits. ($3.56 + shipping. Yeh, I feel much better about this one.)
So I don't really trust their quality control, but at least it only costs me $3.
You can often get Belkin or Monster branded cables on ebay for cheap. I'll pay a little more for known quality.
\inside for anyone who reads the works of other CNET blogs.
\\Yes, I realize that HDMI does not have an inline fuse.
I find it interesting that people come out of the woodwork to pimp Monoprice on those occasions when I *don't* mention it. What, do they wash and wax your car with every purchase or something?
And people (including me) always mention Monoprice because they sell Tier one cables for basically the same price as these 'specials' you guys keep mentioning. Try one and you will realize that there is no better supplier of high quality, but inexpensive cables.
I personally own 3 of them and have gotten others to order 5 or so. As far as I know none of them have crapped out yet. (I've been using mine for about a year.)
monoprice is just about the best place to go for consistently high quality cables for "el cheapo" prices...I think that people are asking why would anyone deal with amazon when monoprice has awesome products.
Monster does some ridiculous things to prevent interference and make sure that you get a clean signal. triple shielding being one example (the reason their cables are thicker is because of the extra foil inside the cable.
That said, making sure that the inner wire pairs are twisted at the proper rate, that they are very close to being exactly equal in length, and making sure that the connections between the wires and the connectors are solid makes a big difference in whether high-bitrate signals are successfully transmitted (the longer the cable, the more important the details are).
Shielding *shouldn't* matter in most instances...unshielded twisted pair cabling is commonly used in gigabit ethernet connections, after all...but in noisy environments or with longer lengths of cable, you might need it.
I think I paid 15 bucks for the cables I bought (online...cheapcables.com, I think), and they're fine. $70 is ridiculous, and .70 is probably a little bit too cheap for me (unless they're .5 meter cables).
An extremely high quality 6' HDMI at Monoprice is $3.56 plus shipping. If that breaks your bank, then...well...wow.
Clearly you should read a little bit about this subject. There are plenty of 'inbetween' scenarios for digital signals traveling along a length of cable in an imperfect environment (READ: ALL CABLES CARRYING SIGNALS). There is no perfect digital signal in the real world -- this only exists in simulation.
Some issues that can arise: time it takes the signal to travel down the cable, whether all signals arrive at exactly the same time (those first two are not the same), whether interference changes some of the data, whether interference causes delays in the data. There are more.
Buying excessively expensive cables is dumb. Buying very poor quality cables will give you poor quality sound. This might be a cheap usable cable, I don't know since I don't have any of them. But just because a signal is digital does NOT guarantee that it 'either gets there or not'.
I think the author was trying more to point out that HDMI cables can be had for $3 than he was trying to promote any vendor in particular. Eforcity/Amazon just happened to be the one found at the time. Many other places exist of course.
Hopefully noone is foolish enough to take comments here as truths without doing some reading on the subject.
now, i'm in no way advocating buying monster cable (i used to work at tweeter before it went bankrupt, i know what snake oil is), but i'd be suspicious of a 3 dollar cable, especially with larger, high quality displays that can actually show you the difference, and over longer cable runs.
http://www.firefold.com/HDMI-Cable-13b-30AWG-6-Foot-With-Gold-Plated-Connectors-w-FireFold-Logo-P4469C35.aspx
I won't ever buy a brand name again.
10 foot 1.3b M/M HDMI cable for $1.69 and free shipping, can't beat this.
- by ducttape36 June 9, 2009 7:42 AM PDT
- congrats, this made it on digg!
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
Showing 1 of 2 pages (70 Comments)