HDMI 2.1's successor broke cover at CES 2025, promising significantly increased bandwidths to support much more demanding video formats, and now we have a clearer understanding of what those video ...
The forthcoming HDMI 2.2 standard will bring more bandwidth, a new way to get a handle on lip-sync errors and a new, backward-compatible cable, the HDMI Forum said at CES 2025. The good news is that ...
HDMI cables are nothing new, with them being involved in virtually all aspects of the technological world. They connect computers, video game consoles, Blu-ray players, and more to televisions and ...
TL;DR: The HDMI 2.2 specification, unveiled at CES 2025, offers up to 96Gbps bandwidth, supporting resolutions up to 10K at 120Hz. It introduces the Ultra96 cable and a Latency Indication Protocol for ...
The HDMI Forum has officially released version 2.2 of the HDMI specification, bringing support for video resolutions up to 16K at 60Hz and boosting maximum bandwidth to 96Gbps. Alongside the spec, ...
At CES 2025, the HDMI Forum, Inc. announced the next version of the HDMI specification, HDMI 2.2, with vastly increased bandwidth to 96 Gbps (up from 48 Gbps in HDMI 2.1). The extra bandwidth will ...
When CES 2025 rolls around in a few weeks, we’re going to get all of the details on the next HDMI specification, which, according to the HDMI Forum, will require a new type of HDMI cable. In a joint ...
Craig is a reporter for Pocket-lint based in Toronto. He earned a diploma in journalism from Seneca Polytechnic and holds a Media Foundations certificate from Humber College. Craig previously interned ...
We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. With a wide range of electronics using the High-Definition Multimedia Interface or HDMI to send or receive audio and video signals, HDMI ...
Anthony is a Toronto-based communications specialist with degrees in history and journalism who loves to use his research and interview skills to inform and entertain. He has over a decade of ...
I rarely even get content in 1080p, my cable company still broadcasts in 1080i. The only time I get anything higher quality is the rare special sports event (only ones that they broadcast on their ...