Wire connections are hardly pleasing to the eye. The good news is, wireless systems has converted your house into eye candy. A few of the greatest clutter-busting gadgets ever designed are the wireless phone, the wireless router, and the Bluetooth dongle. Now another electronic wonder has come out --
Wireless HDMI -- so you will be able to shift that large-screen LCD TV from your desk to your wall devoid of having the hideous sight of hanging HDMI cables and wires.
With Wireless HDMI technology, you don't have to drill holes and run cables and wires from your DVR, HD DVD player, cable box, or game console to enjoy high-definition audio and video broadcasts in full 1080p on your TV. Wireless HDMI devices are intended to make it much quicker for you to mount and connect all your electronic digital equipment specially if they are situated several feet apart from each other.
This is excellent for setups where you cannot hold all your HD sources in the same area.
Precisely how does Wireless HDMI work? The
Wireless HDMI equipment, which is commonly a little black box, receives audio and video information from an HD source such as a HD DVD player, and transmits this particular high-definition broadcast to your HDTV or HD projector over ultra-wideband radio frequencies.
Still in its infancy,
Wireless HDMI technology of course experienced a few challenges with early gadgets that delivered volatile video signals and was confined to short-range coverage. Additionally, right now there is still no established standard for Wireless HDMI, and providers are working with their proprietary technology such as the Sony Bravia Wireless Link, Philips Wireless HDTV Link, LG Wireless 1080p, and Asus Wireless Display Connectivity.
As upgrades to
Wireless HDMI technology are being engineered, it is anticipated that upcoming HD gadgets will include wireless connectivity functionality as well. The Gefen EXT-WHDMI Wireless HDMI Extender is one of the recent models that have shown real promise.