No, the TV must have been made with the HDMI connector built in.
s-Video is pretty much a dead standard. You should use it only if your tv does not have component video or HDMI.
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.
No. Standard audio video cable connections work as well if not better, which is important given that most receivers and TVs have limited HDMI ports, which are usually maxed out by DVD, TV and PVRs
No. There is no composite video standard for high definition. If a video signal is composite, then it is also standard definition. High definition television will normally need an HDMI connection. Although there are other HD interfaces, HDMI is the only one found on domestic equipment. Any other output on a DVD player or receiver is almost certain to be an SD output only.
HDMI selector switch from RadioShack. You can connect multiple HDMI devices to it, and select which one passes through to the HDMI cable that you connect from the device to the tv. If the tv is a good distance away from the tv, then go with an HDMI over cat5e extender.
No. HDMI cables will need an HDMI input and only HD capable TVs will have them.
The Apple HDMI to HDMI cable lets you connect an Apple TV, Mac mini, There are a number of HDMI-standard cable connectors available, The thing is, when I use an RGB cable it works just fine, and I can get my laptop screen to show up on the TV
Use hdmi
Yes there is an HDMI output available for use on this laptop.
of course to use TV with 2 HDMI , as you get two inputs from two different receivers .
HDMI cables have not ports in a non hd tv so no you should not use them
Use the component connectors instead.
a standard ps3 can play on a normal tv as long as u have the right cable that are coax not hdmi
s-Video is pretty much a dead standard. You should use it only if your tv does not have component video or HDMI.
If your TV is an HDTV with HDMI connection it is foolish not to spend the money to purchase and use the cable. The cheapest games are more than the cost of the cable and you would get much more from the system. It is what the PS3 was designed and the games it plays was designed for. The prices for HDTVs are low and you will be able to tell the difference if you upgrade your TV, but when you already have an HDTV you really need to add the HDMI cable. Of course a HDMI plug is for HDTVS and not Standard 480i TVs and the standard A/V cable that comes with a PS3 will work with the HDTV, just not with the same results.
That is not possible since HD-players use HDMI for connecting to the television. It wouldn't be very useful to connect HD-players to SDTV's, because that way the player has no advantage over a standard DVD player.
I don't think the HDMI signal can be split.