Frage von Darthharry:I wanted to buy me a new little notebook and use the synonymous s.and than playback devices for a Full HD television. The laptop that I have chosen synonymous has an HDMI output, but the native resolution is 1280x800. Can we spend on the graphics card synonymous higher resolutions (; ie Full HD), or which (always on the native resolution, and limited small)?
Antwort von tommyb:
No, you can synonymous higher resolution output if the attached monitor (;) in this case, the Television so synonymous supported.
Antwort von PeterM:
The question can not be answered 100%.
As a rule, but yes, even more so if the laptop has its own Graphic card.
On Beipeil Nvidea.
AMD (; ATI) chipset but synonymous Inter have similar attitudes are called the only different.
It is not in clone mode, because the cloned monitor max can lead to the collapse of the notebook monitor.
The same often applies to expand the so-called Mode s.Vista no longer available), as synonymous here, the resolution must be equal.
(But synonymous in the case of two independent screens, with Nvidea Dualview) is depending on the chip is not always as it may be that the GPU is not hinekommt. Mostly it goes.
But what almost always goes the constellation Single Monitor and then select the HDMI output. Then the laptop screen is dark and full HD is on the HDMI output is available ..
So the safe side before you try out the laptop purchase.
Antwort von Darthharry:
Ok, thanks for the info. Since I buy the laptop in the network with the test is difficult, but it has its own graphics card so it should go
Antwort von WoWu:
It can happen to you only that but you see your desktop on the TV, (but no content; movies) when the notebook is not HDCP compliant.
HDMI is always accompanied with HDCP. That you should consider.
Antwort von Darthharry:
I do not want to play your movies so of BlueRay but normally as high-definition video without copy protection. That should go without HDCP synonymous ...
Antwort von WoWu:
HDCP is a hardware protection and will take place during the handshake between the devices. So this is not necessarily dependent on the content and especially not if Blu-ray or not, because BR is only a memory process.
In any case, I would make sure that each work.
Here in the forum were already surprised a few users who could see nothing except the graphics.
Testing costs nothing ...
Antwort von carstenkurz:
HDMI with HDCP is not coupled in principle - for 'HDMI s.Computern / notebooks must be already more of a DVI interface with HDCP optional (start support, if at all). Whether it be in the form of an HDMI or DVI socket is realized, is fairly no preference. By default, a notebook s.so HDCP not be active.
What resolutions does the laptop actually supported depends of built-up from the graphics hardware or the drivers. But even supports ne 3 years old simple graphics FullHD Intel chipset, I would simply like to go out at least that 1080/60p is in any case, but not necessarily all the timings that are commonly via HDMI.
In principle, however, it can ALWAYS get when connecting to displays of Computer and handshake problems if HDCP is in play, the display has only one HDMI input so.
Therefore, one should at least for one of the devices still have ne option return or run a test.
- Carsten
Antwort von deti:
In principle, however, it can ALWAYS get when connecting to displays of Computer and handshake problems if HDCP is in play, the display has only one HDMI input so. Support HDMI inputs, the (; in the EDID block via DCC), HDCP, always synonymous allow connection of DVI or HDMI sources that do not support HDCP. That is the meaning of the handshake.
A knock-out criterion is, of course, if the EDID block transmitted HDMI -/DVI-Modi is no intersection with the modes of the source.
Deti