Article 33MTW This $120 HDMI cable claims to make your picture better… and it does

This $120 HDMI cable claims to make your picture better… and it does

by
Peter Bright
from Ars Technica - All content on (#33MTW)
mCableGaming_2D_Front_withChip__15219.15

Enlarge (credit: Marseille)

Well, this is a turn-up for the books. Normally an HDMI cable that claims to improve your picture quality would be just so much audiophool [editorial standards prevent me from using an appropriate noun here]. HDMI cables carry digital signals, and bits are bits, right? Add to that a "directional" claim-you've gotta plug the right end into the TV-and normally our eyes would be rolling.

But the Marseille mCable Gaming Edition appears to be a working, legitimate product. It's an HDMI cable that makes the kind of claims that we've come to expect from audiophile con men, but there's a key difference: Marseille isn't making its performance claims on the basis of specious nonsense about construction, materials, and chakras. Rather, this cord works because the Gaming Edition HDMI cable has a microchip in it. That microchip performs anti-aliasing of the signal passed through the cable.

The cable is intended for console gamers. While the Xbox One X is set to shake things up a bit when it's released later this year, the consoles currently on the market are, especially from a GPU perspective, relatively underpowered. While PC gamers can readily achieve 1080p or better with a wide range of anti-aliasing options-which offer all kinds of trade-offs between performance, image quality, and the visibility of jagged edges-console gamers have far fewer options. Their graphics processors just aren't strong enough to offer the same kind of flexibility and image quality.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

index?i=oo_75riQn7I:kEKMf_yx4mY:V_sGLiPB index?i=oo_75riQn7I:kEKMf_yx4mY:F7zBnMyn index?d=qj6IDK7rITs index?d=yIl2AUoC8zA
External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index
Feed Title Ars Technica - All content
Feed Link https://arstechnica.com/
Reply 0 comments