View Full Version : DVI-A and DVI-B???
kntgsp
Mar 27, 2006, 11:58 PM
Ok so I recently got an LCDTV with DVI and VGA inputs on it. However the salesguy said that apparently DVI for tv's is different than DVI on computers, (dvi-a vs. dvi-b) and that I wouldn't be able to plug in a computer through the dvi input.....is he full of crap? I never thought that was true............
Anyway, is this DVI-A/B junk for real? I know HDMI is just DVI with sound in one cable. But anybody who uses a stereo system and not the integrated garbage speakers on a tv don't need that anyway. There are splitter for video/audio for HDMI signals so you just hook up the DVI to the TV and audio to the stereo.
Anyway WTF is the difference? IS there one? I'm so confused I'm about ready to punch the salesman in the mouth.
Laslo Panaflex
Mar 28, 2006, 12:01 AM
DVI-A is analog only, DVI-B doesn't exist, he must have meant DVI-D, which is digital.
Look here for more info.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVI
You should be able to hook your computer to your TV, you just need to right cable.
kntgsp
Mar 28, 2006, 12:18 AM
DVI-A is analog only, DVI-B doesn't exist, he must have meant DVI-D, which is digital.
Look here for more info.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVI
You should be able to hook your computer to your TV, you just need to right cable.
So a TV doesn't have to have a "special" DVI input? Cuz this moron at Best Buy kept telling me that you can't connect a TV to it. Even though it has a DVI input, not HDMI.
And on a side note, what if a TV has no DVI inputs, only 2 HDMI's? (the other one I was thinking of getting). Is there a way to hook it up to that? Since HDMI is basically just DVI with sound, is there some way to work that?
Laslo Panaflex
Mar 28, 2006, 12:33 AM
And on a side note, what if a TV has no DVI inputs, only 2 HDMI's? (the other one I was thinking of getting). Is there a way to hook it up to that? Since HDMI is basically just DVI with sound, is there some way to work that?
You need to get an DVI to HDCP cable, like these:
http://www.ramelectronics.net/html/DVI-hdmi_cables.html
Keep in mind sound doesn't transfer, so unless the HDMI source has additional audio input on that HDMI source, you have to use external sound, like your home theater.
Edit: Whatever TV you get, make sure it supports HDCP if you plan on hooking up a bluray or HD-DVD player in the future.
HDCP info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDCP
Shadow
Mar 28, 2006, 01:03 AM
You need to get an DVI to HDCP cable, like these:
http://www.ramelectronics.net/html/DVI-hdmi_cables.html
Keep in mind sound doesn't transfer, so unless the HDMI source has additional audio input on that HDMI source, you have to use external sound, like your home theater.
Edit: Whatever TV you get, make sure it supports HDCP if you plan on hooking up a bluray or HD-DVD player in the future.
HDCP info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDCP
Wrong, you need a DVI to HDMI cable/adapter. Since DVI and HDMI are the same thing (DVI only carries video, HDMI carries video and audio) when interchanging between formats no quality is lost. However, if using a HDMI source, an alternate souce of sound will be needed.
Correct about HDCP tho. :)
Counterfit
Mar 28, 2006, 01:10 AM
In regards to DVI-A/D I thought one carried both analog and digital signals, and the other just digital. That has always confused me. :confused:
Wrong, you need a DVI to HDMI cable/adapter. Since DVI and HDMI are the same thing (DVI only carries video, HDMI carries video and audio) when interchanging between formats no quality is lost. However, if using a HDMI source, an alternate souce of sound will be needed.
Don't be in such a hurry to stroke your ego. Laslo said the exact same thing
Heb1228
Mar 28, 2006, 01:15 AM
I thought one carried both analog and digital signals, and the other just digital. That has always confused me. :confused:
Here you go...
The DVI connector on a device is therefore given one of three names, depending on which signals it implements:
DVI-D (digital only)
DVI-A (analog only)
DVI-I (digital and analog)
But I agree this doesn't make a whole lot of sense... the first letter in the acronym stands for Digital and there is a type that is analog only? What the crap?! Did Microsoft invent this thing? J/k... :D
superbovine
Mar 28, 2006, 02:15 AM
Here you go...
But I agree this doesn't make a whole lot of sense... the first letter in the acronym stands for Digital and there is a type that is analog only? What the crap?! Did Microsoft invent this thing? J/k... :D
The Digital Display Working Group (DDWG) was organized by Intel Corporation, Silicon Image, Inc., Compaq Computer Corp., Fujitsu Limited, Hewlett-Packard Company, International Business Machines Corp., and NEC Corporation. did...
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