Thinking of trying an HDTV as a monitor for "across the room" viewing... and wondering.... with HDMI on the TV and HDMI port on video card, do they work together properly, sound and all? No separate connection for sound?
TIA
TIA
Quote from Scataphagos:
Thinking of trying an HDTV as a monitor for "across the room" viewing... and wondering.... with HDMI on the TV and HDMI port on video card, do they work together properly, sound and all? No separate connection for sound?
TIA
Quote from mgookin:
How is sound getting to the HDMI on the GPU? I'm not saying it doesn't but I don't understand how it does. And now that I think of it, I'm pretty sure I've used HDMI from a laptop to watch a movie and the sound came across like normal. Just don't understand how that's working. This would mean the sound card (or onboard chip) would have to feed to the HDMI output on the GPU. Maybe (probably) the laptop has onboard video and onboard sound which would make more sense. Not sure about a tower with video card, sound card, etc.
Quote from Scataphagos:
One guy said he ran a video card w/HDMI to his TV and it all works great... no mention if he had to do anything with sound.
But the Netflix streaming may only do 2 channels over the Internet anyway. If you were to play a Bluray movie disc on your laptop, you may get 5.1 out to your A/V receiver.Quote from Bolimomo:
Yap HDMI carries the audio signals in addition to video. I think it is more than the basic 2 channel though not sure if it does 5.1 or something like that. For the basic stereo, no problem.
It would work if your laptop has a HDMI output port (mine does). Or your PCIeX16 video card has a HDMI output port (not all do). If you do have that HDMI out, the video card driver should know to provide you an output channel for the HDMI to send audio.
I plug in a long HDMI cable and watch some Netflix Instant movies on my 52-inch plasma screen via my A/V receiver. I didn't know if I have 5.1 effect because I tuned down the volume usually. Next time I will check.But the Netflix streaming may only do 2 channels over the Internet anyway. If you were to play a Bluray movie disc on your laptop, you may get 5.1 out to your A/V receiver.
Quote from WinstonTJ:
most video cards don't have integrated audio.