The decoder box has to have a HDMI or Component output connectors for you to be able to connect to the tv and get a high def. picture. Most decoders are low quality devices. I have a HD decoder and even it will not produce a really good picture.
Both the source and the TV have to have a HDMI connector. If they don't, use the S-connector. No S- connector? you will have to use the VIDEO connection on the TV.
EASY: Because the TV is broken.
Connect the digital audio output of the DVD to the the HRT-6130. The HDMI inputs on the HRT6130 are only pass-through, so audio needs to be connected on another cable. If you have a HDMI output on the DVD player, use a HDMI cable to connect it to the TV.
Yes and No.If I understand the question correctly, you want to connect your cable box to your HDTV via HDMI, your DVR via component cable (Red, Green and Blue RCA connectors), and your VCR via component cables. Your HDTV should accept various video inputs - HDMI, component, and composite (the yellow RCA connector). Most argue that the HDMI connection will provide the best quality video. Next in quality is component video. Last is composite video. Your cable box may or may not have an HDMI connection. If it does and you subcribe to HD channels from your cable provider, then definitely use HDMI to connect to the cable box. If you have another HDMI input available on your TV, then connect it to the DVR (if the DVR has the HDMI output). Your VCR will likely have to be connected via composite cable. It's a crappy signal but VCR don't provide a great signal to begin with. Most VCRs only offer a composite (at best) output, anyway.
The Bose 321 system does not support Hi-Def inputs, so the best idea is to use it just for sound. Connect the digital audio output of the Cable box to the optical input of the 321. Connect an HDMI cable from the Cable box to the TV directly.
It would depend on what kind of outputs your laptop has and what kind of inputs your Television has. If you have a HDMI output on your computer, but only RCA inputs on your television you'd have to find a converter from HDMI to RCA.
The channel your TV would need to be on to watch the DISH Network programming would be dependent upon how you have the receiver connected to the TV, for ex are you using an HDMI cable, CO axle cables, or an RCA cable? If you're using an HDMI cable then generally you would need to have your TV on the HDMI 1 or HDMI 2 input, if you're using CO axle then it would most likely be channel 3 or 4, and if you're using RCA then it is generally input video 1 or 2 or composite.
You need an HDTV for it to work and the TV has to have an HDMI connection. Then you need to turn your HDTV to the location for the HDMI that was connected
Both the source and the TV have to have a HDMI connector. If they don't, use the S-connector. No S- connector? you will have to use the VIDEO connection on the TV.
That cable will work as long as your TV has an RCA output.
Use the HDMI cable if the TV has one and change the TV over to HDMI or whatever HDMI PLUG number you used if you have more than one. Some TVs also need to have settings changed to accept HDMI and the sync.
I'm sorry, but without special hardware - you don't. HDMI is a digital meta-data-enabled connector, while RCA is analog signal type. You would have to have a device that would take the digital information, decode it and send it off as analog to the TV.
HDMI cables contain both the video and the audio signal, so you just plug it in and it should work.
example of analog device is amplifier,op-amp,transistor,transducer etc and example of digital device is adder,multiplexer,encoder,decoder etc.
Depending upon the type receiver you have, 3 options are available for connecting the receiver to your TV. With the VIP 211, 211k, 222, 612 receivers, you can use a coax, RCA, component or HDMI cable to connect to your TV; HDMI giving you the highest quality picture if you have HD programming. The VIP 222k, 622, 722, 722k, and 922 receivers allow you to use RCA, component or HDMI cable (K series receivers and 922 have a coax port with OTA module installed). All other receivers can use the coax or RCA cables. Connect the type cable you have from your receiver to your TV. If you are using a coax cable, place your TV on channel 3 or 4. Any other type cable, you place your TV on an Input setting - HDMI for HDMI cable; comp for component cable; or Vid, AV, etc. for RCA cable.
Why would you want to when the RCA cable is only for 480i picture and the HDMI is for HDTV. If your TV can work with the HDMI cables then it is a HDTV and the will not provide the same results with an RCA connection. Anyway the HDMI cable is capable of sync and can adjust the setting and automatically switch your TV to the PS3 when you turn on the PS3 slim model (earlier models do not have this feature). You need to go to the PS3 settings and the TV settings to correctly reflect the 480i signal and to manually turn your TV to the PS3 input location every time you now want to use it with the RCA connection. You will also have to manually switch it back when you want to watch TV instead of playing the PS3. The PS3 does have the ability to have the video reset to the lowest level which will allow the RCA cables to work again. This is done by holding down the power button for two beeps while the system is turned off. That is supposed to reset the video to the lowest level according to instructions
HDMI is a connection plug on the back of HDTVs to allow other devices to be connected to the HDTV. Before HDMI they used S Video and Component connections to connect devices