Back when all audio and video were analog in nature, it very much did matter what cables and wires you used. Some were better at thwarting interference. Some carried the signal farther with less degradation. That doesn't mean those $50 gold-plated Monster cables actually improved quality by a tremendous amount, but the composition and manufacturing quality of analog cables does have an effect on the final output. This has led to all sorts of snake-oil salesmanship in the home theater/audio space, such as the aforementioned (and perennial whipping boy) Monster.
But now we've gone (or are at least going) digital. The key difference in digital is that the nature of the cable carrying the data does not matter. Either the signal gets to the end in one piece, or it gets corrupted along the way--meaning you either get no output at all, or unintelligible garbage. But slight, almost-imperceptible quality variations depending on the cable's manufacture? Nah, doesn't really happen with digital.
Even so, you still have instances like this: Link
The above, as the linked article explains, is pure nonsense.
I imagine most of the regulars in SciTech are already aware that digital signals don't work anything like analog ones, but I wanted to post this in the hopes of educating people who may not have known. Don't be conned into buying expensive digital cables. There's really no benefit. Either the cable works or it doesn't. Odds are, that cheapo $5 cable you bought from Cables Unlimited will work just as well as the $150 one the Best Buy sales rep tried to push on you.
Be smart: don't let the digital snake-oil salesmen fool you.
But now we've gone (or are at least going) digital. The key difference in digital is that the nature of the cable carrying the data does not matter. Either the signal gets to the end in one piece, or it gets corrupted along the way--meaning you either get no output at all, or unintelligible garbage. But slight, almost-imperceptible quality variations depending on the cable's manufacture? Nah, doesn't really happen with digital.
Even so, you still have instances like this: Link
“My only guess is that the Super SATAs reject interference significantly better than the standard cables and in so doing lower the noise floor revealing greater low-level musical detail and presentational improvements in the soundstage and the ‘air’ around instruments.”
The above, as the linked article explains, is pure nonsense.
I imagine most of the regulars in SciTech are already aware that digital signals don't work anything like analog ones, but I wanted to post this in the hopes of educating people who may not have known. Don't be conned into buying expensive digital cables. There's really no benefit. Either the cable works or it doesn't. Odds are, that cheapo $5 cable you bought from Cables Unlimited will work just as well as the $150 one the Best Buy sales rep tried to push on you.
Be smart: don't let the digital snake-oil salesmen fool you.