Yes it carries the HDMI signal properly.
No, HDMI converters and HDMI extenders are not the same. An HDMI converter is designed to change the format of the HDMI signal, allowing it to be compatible with different types of connections, such as converting HDMI to VGA or DisplayPort. In contrast, an HDMI extender is used to extend the distance over which an HDMI signal can travel, typically using Ethernet cables or other means to maintain signal quality over longer distances.
Look on the back of the TV for a HDMI input connection. If it is there, your TV is capable of receiving a HDMI signal.
When you use a VGA cable coming out of the monitor, the monitor is giving out an analog signal through the VGA connection. For the monitor to give out a digital signal, you need a DVI or HDMI cable. The VGA to HDMI cord just converts the analog signal into a digital signal so it's not completely useless, however the quality will not be as good as an HDMI to HDMI or DVI to DVI or HDMI to DVI
The signal path for HDMI connections can either be single link or double link. The single link is called type A/C.
The coaxial RF input on a HDTV will process a HD signal but it is not an HDMI input.
That would be dependent on your device. It will show any video signal ported to the HDMI port.
There is no truth in the statement. HDMI is an interface that carries digital audio and video signals. The image quality is dependent entirely on the quality and resolution of the signal that is delivered to the HDMI port by the video source. The HDMI connectors and cable carry that signal to the receiver but the cable does not change it in any way at all. DVI is compatible with HDMI other than the fact that there is no audio carried with the video signal. The video signal is identical to that carried by an HDMI cable and so this alone proves that statement to be false.
VGA to HDMI cable convert an analogue signal to a digital signal. It does this by connecting an audio cable to the adapter, where the video signal is fused with the audio also, so there is only one cable connecting to your HDTV.
No, you cannot send an HDMI signal through S-Video cables. HDMI and S-Video are fundamentally different technologies: HDMI transmits digital audio and video signals, while S-Video carries analog video signals. Additionally, S-Video does not have the bandwidth to support the high-definition video and audio quality that HDMI provides. To transmit HDMI signals, you need appropriate HDMI cables.
I don't think the HDMI signal can be split.
for a high definition signal on a playstation 3 you need a hdmi cable using a simple scart lead will only give you standard deffinition if you are looking to buy a hdmi cable the cheapest ones are on eBay