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Digital Connectivity - A Tutorial | |
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By Rodolfo La Maestra Senior Technical Director Posted on April 25, 2006 Category: Technology |
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Register Now to receive notification of new HDTV Magazine Articles via email as soon as they are published. This is an excerpt from the HDTV Technology Review 2006 Report by Rodolfo La Maestra. If you are interested in the full version of this report, it is currently available from the HDTV Technology Review page.
The other parts in the series are:
Part 1: HDTV Technology Review, Part 1: Introduction
Part 2: 1080p into HDTV Displays
This tutorial article was drafted when DVI was starting to be implemented in HDTVs and first appeared on my 2003 HDTV report. Since then, it is customarily included in a separate section within each yearly report to provide the basic background about digital connections used in HDTV equipment.
Additionally, on each annual report I use other sections to provide an update of how these connections are being implemented on audio and video equipment year after year, what type of problems they have, what functionally they facilitate, what is recommended regarding technical requirements when looking for a product (such as having HDCP compliance, a big issue in the 2003/4 reports), etc.
In the 2006 report, HDMI is mentioned throughout the report, additionally there is a separate large section that covers the HDMI chips, the HDMI implementation, the trends of manufacturer's adoption, the specifications of the released versions, the issues surrounding incompatibility of HDMI suited products, the issues surrounding the new multi-channel audio hi-bit transported with HDMI, the implementation of content protection over the HDMI connection, etc.
Each yearly report adds a new layer of the year regarding HDMI, as issues, as upgrades, as implementation trends, organizations involved with, manufacturers using it for 1080p sets and blu-laser players, etc.
In other words, this except is just a section to get the reader familiarized with the basics of digital connectivity. For the complete picture, including wireless digital connectivity, please consult the annual reports.
The 1.0 DVI specification is a point-to-point solution that supports video content but not audio. DVI uses the Transition-Minimized Differential Signaling (TMDS) protocol developed by Silicon Image. PanelLink is the Silicon Image's proprietary implementation of TMDS.
The HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection) 1.0 specification was developed by Intel with contributions from Silicon Image in February 2000 to protect DVI outputs from being copied by providing a secure link between a video source and a display device.
HDCP offers authentication, encryption, and renewability. The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) endorsed HDCP as the standard for the secure transmission of HD signals over DVI.
Most new DTV monitors and integrated displays have incorporated DVI or HDMI inputs, although on their first generation some panels were not HDCP compliant, now there is a large volume of H/DTV equipment that is. However, some displays were reported to have interoperability problems regarding DVI/HDCP or HDMI/HDCP.
The DVI standard is able to handle single or dual link connections. A single-link connection supports up to UXGA resolution of 1600 x 1200 at 60 Hz. Dual-link connections provide bandwidth for resolutions beyond QXGA (2048 x 1536).
According to DVI specs a single link has 165 MHz/pixels capacity for 3 channels, Red, Green and Blue, each channel could support up to 1.65 Gbps speed rate, or a total of 4.95 Gbps for the 3 channels (165 MHz x 30 bits x sec). Dual-link connections double that capacity to 330 MHz, with a speed-rate capacity up to 9.9 Gbps.
The 1080i HD format has 1125 total lines of 2200 pixels x frame (active image 1080x1920), requiring 74.25 MHz/pixels (1125 x 2200 x 30fps). Each pixel contains data for RGB and is implemented by DVI with 30 bits (8 per each color plus another 6 for encoding). An HD 74.25 MHz/pixel signal would require 2.2 Gbps speed rate.
A link of 3 channels supporting 165 MHz is sufficient for the 74.25 MHz HD 1080i signal without requiring the use of the second link, and will also be sufficient to transport a 1080p/60 frames x second signal at 148.5 MHz without requiring the second link.
If the signal to be transmitted would be higher than the single link capacity of 165 MHz, it would require the use of a dual DVI link connection, each link will carry half of the signal; the second link cannot be used with just what is exceeding 165 MHz of the first link. For example, a 200 MHz signal would be carried with both links operating at 100 MHz each.
HDMI uses the same 165MHz capacity per link; dual-link uses the B connector with the second link pins.
DVI identifies and auto-configures the connected device. If source equipment is connected with DVI single link to a display configured as dual link DVI, the image will experience a lower resolution. Some first generation single link DVI cables use dual link connectors. DVI standard cables have typically a five-meter distance limitation, although with better quality wiring, such as fiber-optic, higher distances are possible.
There are three types of DVI connectors:
DVI-I (integrated), carries a single or dual-link digital signal, with an additional analog signal for legacy devices. The 29-pin DVI connector uses 24 pins for the digital data stream (12 for each link) and 5 pins (1 plus-shaped blade and 4 pins) to carry analog video and ground.
![]() DVI-I |
DVI-D (digital) carries digital-only video data to a display. It is designed for 12 or 24 pin connections, and single/dual link operation (notice the lack of 4 pins, 2 above/2 below the flat blade).
![]() DVI-D |
DVI-A (analog) is available for legacy analog applications to carry analog signals to a CRT monitor or an analog HDTV (claims to be better than VGA). The three rows of eight pins have three pins missing in the first row, five missing in the second row and four missing in the third row, and that the "flat blade" contact seen to the left has two contacts above and below it. There is no single or dual link in analog cables.
![]() DVI-A |
Regarding connecting plugs to receptacles:
A DVI-D plug can be connected to either DVI-D or DVI-I receptacles,
A DVI-A plug can be connected to either DVI-I/A or VGA (w/adapter) receptacles,
A DVI-A receptacle would accept DVI-I but not DVI-D.
A DVI-I plug can be connected to either DVI-I or DVI-A receptacles (the 'A' ignores 'I's digital pins)
In March 2000, an updated specification was approved, the 1394a. The "a" standard supports speeds of 100Mbps, 200Mbps, and 400Mbps over a distance of 4.5 meters, and up to 63 peer-to-peer nodes/devices.
In 2001, the IEEE 1394 "b" standard emerged as a network technology (rather than as serial bus); it is capable of moving data streams at faster speeds over longer distances than the original.
The "b" standard specifications were intended to support up to 3,200 Mbps depending on the cable material, and permit the use of cabling materials not supported by the "a" standard. It supports speeds up to 100Mbps over 100 meters of Category 5 wiring, 400 Mbps over 100 meters of plastic optical fiber, and up to 3,200 Mbps (or 3.2 Gbps) over 100 meters of glass optical fiber.
The "b" standard is compatible with the "a" standard; if an "a" device were plugged into a "b" component, the bus would deliver a maximum speed limited by the "a" standard (400Mbps). Each "b" device can be set up to 100 meters apart from the next in sequence, allowing the total network to be quite significant in cable length.
The licensing fee for the use of the patented technology is $ 0.25 per system; chipsets are less than $5 each in volume.
It supports hot swapping and plug-and-play, so a consumer's 1394 bus can recognize automatically a 1394 device when it is connected/disconnected, and reconfigure itself.
The connection is now being used by a growing number of DTV equipment manufacturers for the transmission of compressed HD signals, such as D-VHS recording and networking DTV equipment.
There are three types of cables used for 1394. The 6-conductor type has two separately shielded twisted pairs for data and two power wires in an overall shielded cable with 6-pin connectors on either side. The 4-wire cable uses two separately shielded data cables without power wires in an overall shielded cable with 4-pin connectors on either end. The third type of cable uses either type of actual cable, with a 6-pin connector on one side, and a 4-pin connector on the other side of the cable.
The 4-pin connector is more common on digital video camcorders and other small external devices because of it's small size, while the 6-pin connector is more common on PC's, external hard drives due to it's durability and support for external power for 1394 peripherals.
![]() 6-pin female connector above left 4-pin female connector above right |
![]() The 6-pin male connector |
![]() 4-pin male connector |
HD signals are broadcast in compressed MPEG-2 format at approximately 19 Mbps. D-VHS VCRs are able record compressed HD signals and require a 1394 connection to receive the digital data stream. HDTV monitors require a MPEG-2 decoder to decompress the signal for display, as oppose to DVI that is uncompressed.
DTCP (Digital Transmission Content Protection) has been created for the purpose of copy protection over the 1394 connection. DTCP is also known as 5c for the five companies that participated on the standard (Sony, Toshiba, Intel, Hitachi, and Matsushita).
During the last two to three years, there have been many discussions (and hype) about using these types of digital connections (DVI and 1394) for DTV equipment, rather than only the analog connections (component YPbPr, RGB, RGBHV, etc), for protecting HD digital content.
Since 2003, most manufacturers released a large variety of products adopting these two connections to enable their equipment for digital connectivity, IEEE1394 for compressed HD video from integrated TVs with tuners, cable and OTA HD-STBs mainly for recording purposes, and DVI for uncompressed HD video for the viewing of protected content (using HDCP).
HDMI is quickly replacing DVI and is being implemented already on many products, and is becoming the de-facto standard for transporting uncompressed signals over a cable.
The standard supports HD uncompressed video, 8-channel digital audio (reportedly up to 192 KHz), and some control signals on a single cable (15 mm, 19 pin), while using less than half the available bandwidth. HDMI has the same video capacity as DVI, or up to five Gbps of bandwidth, double what a HD signal would require, and is backward compatible with DVI by using an adapter.
Not included in the standard but used with DVI and HDMI is the HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection) protocol. HDCP is licensed by Intel, designed to protect HDMI and DVI signals from piracy, and used for authentication between A/V products. In 2003, a license fee of five cents was applied to each product (four cents for HDMI, 1 cent for HDCP), that manufacturers had to pay to the HDMI founders and Intel.
Posted by Rodolfo La Maestra, April 25, 2006 07:12 AM
Reader Commentary Apr 25, 9:10am Hi Rodolfo, Thank you for clarifying the capabilities of these different connectors. I'm not sure if this info is available yet but I think that regardless of the success of the two new High Resolution dvd formats presently being introduced as ente Apr 25, 2:55pm Rodolpho, thanks for another informative article that I'm sure many will find useful. Unfortunately, I'm afraid this one doesn't live up to your usual quality standards, in a number of ways... making it less informative and more confusing than it wo Apr 25, 4:06pm Hey Tim, Lighten up, the guys at BestBuy will fill in the blanks. Personally, I come here for info and entertainment, not Engineering 101. Peter M. Apr 25, 5:38pm I think it was a good article and let’s bear in mind the title, it is a tutorial, and also that it is an excerpt from the 2006 HDTV Rodolfo Report. It goes a long way towards helping the average consumer understand what the interfaces are and what they do Apr 25, 7:19pm One small correction... I had said, > Your article gives no clue as to the existence of these issues < which was incorrect. There was at least a hint of the problem with the somewhat oblique acknowledgement, ". Apr 25, 7:47pm Tim, Richard, I first wrote the tutorial article when DVI was coming to light on my 2003 HDTV report, and as you said Richard is just a tutorial with the basics to show what are the connections, The tutorial gets included in a separate section as a tu More on Technology
More from Rodolfo La Maestra
About Rodolfo La MaestraRodolfo La Maestra is the Senior Technical Director at HDTV Magazine and participated in the HDTV vision since the late 1980's. In the late 1990's, he began tracking all HDTV consumer equipment, and since 2002 he authors the annual HDTV Technology Review report covering HDTVs, Hi-def DVD, content providers, broadcast, cable, satellite, government, standards, connectivity, content protection, H/DTV tuners and DVRs, etc. In addition Rodolfo has authored a variety of tutorials, books, and educative articles for HDTV Magazine, DVDetc, and HDTVetc Magazines, Veritas et Visus Newsletter, Display Search, and served as technical consultant/editor for the "Reference Guide" and the "HDTV Glossary of Terms" for HDTVetc and HDTV Magazines. In 2004, he began recording a weekly HDTV technology program for MD Cable television, which by 2006 reached the rating of second most viewed by the public, here is the opening episode.Rodolfo's background encompasses Electronic Engineering, Computer Science, and Audio and Video Electronics, over 4,700 hours of professional training, a BS in Computer and Information Systems, and over thirty professional and post-graduate certifications, some from American, George Washington, and MIT Universities. Rodolfo was also Computer Science professor for over 700 students in five institutions between 1966-1973 in Argentina, for IBM, Burroughs, and Honeywell mainframes. After 38 years of computer systems career, Rodolfo retired in 2003 as Chief of Systems Development from the Inter-American Development Bank where he directed 65 software-development computer professionals, supporting member countries in north/central/south America 24x7. In parallel, from 1998 he helped the public with his other career of audio/video electronics. Rodolfo started with hi-end audio in the early 60’s and merged with Home Theater video, multichannel audio, widescreen laser disc, anamorphic DVD, 16x9 NTSC displays, HDTV, Hi-def DVD, IPTV, HDMI, and 2.35:1 Cinemascope HD Home Theater over the past 40+ years. When HDTV started airing in November 1998, he was an early adopter of HDTV and realized that the technology as implemented would overwhelm regular consumers due to its complexity, and it certainly does even today. Rodolfo then launched his HDTV mission of educating and helping consumers understand the complexity, the challenge, and the beauty of the technology, so the public learns to appreciate HDTV not just as another television. |
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