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IN terminal of your TV.
Using the audio cables, connect the AUDIO (red and white) OUT terminals on the rear of the DVD Recorder to the
AUDIO (red and white) IN terminals of your TV. Turn on the DVD Recorder and TV.
Press the input selector on your TV remote control until the DVI signal from the DVD Recorder appears on your TV
screen.
Cable
video and audio data with just a single connector. Since
HDMI is based on DVI, it is completely compatible with
DVI. The only difference between HDMI and DVI is that
HDMI supports multi-channel audio.
Using HDMI, the DVD recorder transmits a digital video
and audio signal and displays a vivid picture on a TV hav-
ing anHDMI input jack.
tal audio data (LPCM or Bit Stream data).
- Even though the DVD recorder records analog audio and
and a pure digital signal is sent to the TV .
However, when playing a DVD, the data transmitted to a
TV is digital. Therefore either a digital-to-analog converter
(in the DVD Recorder) or an analog-to-digital converter (in
the TV) is required. During this conversion, the picture
quality is degraded due to noise and signal loss. HDMI
technology is superior because it requires no D/A conver-
sion and is a pure digital signal from the DVD recorder to
your TV.
system for protecting DVD content outputted via HDMI
from being copied. It provides a secure digital link between
a video source (PC, DVD. etc) and a display device (TV,
projector. etc). Content is encrypted at the source device
to prevent unauthorized copies from being made.