Comments on: S-Video is dead on AV receivers--do you care?
Fewer AV receivers are including S-Video inputs, and even fewer devices are including S-Video ports. Does anyone still care about S-Video?
Fewer AV receivers are including S-Video inputs, and even fewer devices are including S-Video ports. Does anyone still care about S-Video?
The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com
Add this feed to your online news reader
Raw photos are a hassle compared to JPEG. But if you like photography, the list of their image quality advantages is long and getting longer.
Although Redmond's foray into retail bears a big resemblance to Apple's approach, Microsoft has added some distinctive features to draw casual PC buyers and techies alike.
1) costs much extra;
2) very little used;
3) just record your damn vinyl to a CD and forget about your phono inputs.
As long as you've got a pair of available analog inputs (RCA jacks), you can pick up a phone preamp and hook up a table that way.
S-Video is better than Composite (by a good amount too, you can easily see the difference) and it is for that reason that I don't hook any non-hd sources by Composite and instead by S-Video. Example is that the receiver above has 5 Composite inputs and 1 output. Why not cut that down to 2 inputs and put 2 more component or hdmi b/c in the future people will need it
I think you are missing the point. Any item that usually has an S video connection also has a composite connection as well, but every item that has a composite connection does not always have an S video connection.
Older Ipod Video, VCRs, Nintendo, ps1/2 etc all came standard in the box with composite cables (except ipod with no cables). Except for audiophiles back in the day barely anyone used S video, they just stayed with Composite that came with their player. So if you were to cut out composite instead of S video you are really cutting more of the market out.
If anything I agree with the writer, put one S video on the front just to have but there really is no need for S Video anymore since it was really only marginally better then composite in the first place.
I will give one more example, I have a composite cable for my iphone and ipod, I know I can connect it to just about 99% of the tv's out there when I travel to watch a movie etc, there is no way that percentage would be that high with S video.
I'll be lighting a candle and weeping at the funeral.
They should probably remove this page ---> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-Video
Digitizing and converting legacy media to DVD is a waste of time since transcoding/digitizing is an imperfect and very lengthy process. And then you'll have to do it all over again when the next big trend in media platforms comes along (i.e, affordable Blu-ray recorders.)
This trend away from S-Video -- and mark my words, Component is next as it takes up a lot more room on the backplane and motherboard and doesn't support DRM -- is about moving the mainstream market on to the next big (profitable) thing. Media lovers over the age of 25 whose shelf contains more than just the same predictable releases from the major studios will create a brisk market for compact, high-quality S-to-HDMI converters if indeed S-VHS and other analog connections vanish.
I don't miss S-video on my AVR, as I don't have anything that uses S-video anyway, and if I did, I can always connect it directly to my TV.
I, for one, am looking forward to my new receiver having less clutter.
- by Maxwell De Long September 11, 2009 5:06 AM PDT
- I would not purchase a receiver if it did not have S-video inputs. Analog upconversion is not an option for people who want to hook videogame consoles up to a receiver as it adds lag to a game where split second decisions can make all the difference. The inclusion of an absurd number of composite ports seems odd, given that most things capable of being hooked up via composite are relics of the 80s, 90s and early 2000s, a time where S-video delivered the highest quality video! Subtract two or three composites and replace them with S-video for legacy connections and you will have a hit with the countless others like myself. That or give us lagless video up conversion, and I might be willing to sacrifice the initial video quality...
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(22 Comments)