There's also products that can transmit HDMI wirelessly.
This thread's a joke, right?
Now, on can he alter the ratios etc. that appears on the TV? Is it possible to do that on an HDTV?
There's also products that can transmit HDMI wirelessly.
Good luck on getting your money back. I'm not sure the that stores give refunds when the customer has bought something when they don't really understand.
Good luck on getting your money back. I'm not sure the that stores give refunds when the customer has bought something when they don't really understand.
In the U.S., most retailers of any size who want to stay in business have very liberal return policies for any recently-purchased items in good condition - your reason for return is not an issue. In many, many cases if there is some question about the policy the customer can successfully appeal to management off the sales floor and have an exception made - you just have to be a little persistent.
That's almost never necessary with a chain or major retailer here, though. Sometimes they do charge a "restocking fee" on large or expensive items which is a bite out of your refund - again, ask to speak to management.
In the U.S., most retailers of any size who want to stay in business have very liberal return policies for any recently-purchased items in good condition - your reason for return is not an issue. In many, many cases if there is some question about the policy the customer can successfully appeal to management off the sales floor and have an exception made - you just have to be a little persistent.
That's almost never necessary with a chain or major retailer here, though. Sometimes they do charge a "restocking fee" on large or expensive items which is a bite out of your refund - again, ask to speak to management.
Yes, go in the store, act like a dick, and demand that store/corporate policies be bent or broken for you. Retailers love it when people act like petulant little toddlers.
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For a 6' cable, definitely. Since we were talking about 35' cables, good luck doing much better. Incidentally, monoprice sells the 6' cable for $4, and sometimes on sale for less than thatAnd the fun comparison:
http://www.monoprice.com/products/p...=10240&cs_id=1024005&p_id=2742&seq=1&format=2
Costs $23.78![]()
Even that's too much.
I got a 6ft cable for 5 bucks.
My friend taught me that if you bought a 60 dollar monster HDMI cable all you'd be buying is the name.
Good luck on getting your money back. I'm not sure the that stores give refunds when the customer has bought something when they don't really understand.
In the U.S., most retailers of any size who want to stay in business have very liberal return policies for any recently-purchased items in good condition - your reason for return is not an issue. In many, many cases if there is some question about the policy the customer can successfully appeal to management off the sales floor and have an exception made - you just have to be a little persistent.
That's almost never necessary with a chain or major retailer here, though. Sometimes they do charge a "restocking fee" on large or expensive items which is a bite out of your refund - again, ask to speak to management.
Older TV shows are 480, modern DVDs are 720, and high def is 1080. Just because a screen can display 1080 doesn't mean your DVD will look good. Anything 720 will still look good.
You're quoting the vertical resolution of NTSC TV and HD, but the horizontal resolution of DVDs there. if TV is 480, then so are DVDs, either that or 576 depending on whether it is NTSC or PAL.
720p is the lower of the two popular HD formats, that is the vertical resolution, 1280 x 720. Substantially better than a DVD.
anyone know why my lcd tv can pick up the high def local channels but my mom's lcd set in another room can't? (We have no frills basic/expanded cable with no digital/HD channels, btw)
Older TV shows are 480, modern DVDs are 720, and high def is 1080. Just because a screen can display 1080 doesn't mean your DVD will look good. Anything 720 will still look good.
You're quoting the vertical resolution of NTSC TV and HD, but the horizontal resolution of DVDs there. if TV is 480, then so are DVDs, either that or 576 depending on whether it is NTSC or PAL.
720p is the lower of the two popular HD formats, that is the vertical resolution, 1280 x 720. Substantially better than a DVD.
I am using the numbers I see when I look at the DVD from Handbrake. Yeah, I am possibly referring to them wrongly. That is why I did not call it 720p. From inside Handbrake it says that my newest DVDs are 720 wide. I think of 600 as the standard definition, 720 as enhanced definition, and 1080 as high definition.
If I'm using these terms wrongly, I would love to know. Thanks.
anyone know why my lcd tv can pick up the high def local channels but my mom's lcd set in another room can't? (We have no frills basic/expanded cable with no digital/HD channels, btw)
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