Hier ein super lesenswerter Artikel der US Nachbarn unserer Seite,
welche das komplette Prozedere der Hardware etc durchgehen und
zeigen, wie sie testen. Alter, da sind schon wieder
konsumentenunfreundliche Dinge drin beim verkabeln und setup.
http://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=18524
Any HDMI cable will do so long as it's a "High Speed" HDMI cable,
but for those who actually want to take advantage of what the
player can play and what the TV can display — particularly HDR, or
High Dynamic Range, color — the TV (and a receiver) must be
compliant with the HDMI 2.0a standard. But wait! There's more!
Every HDMI port in the chain also requires compliance with the new
HDCP 2.2 copy protection standard. That means the TV needs at least
one HDCP 2.2 compliant HDMI port in order to enjoy Ultra HD Blu-ray
with HDR color. The player doesn't come with an HDMI cable, or any
cables beyond its power cord for that matter, and if all of your
HDMI cables are from the Blu-ray format's infancy, you'll probably
need to replace them.
Und dann, als alles verkabelt ist:
Something is amiss, even though it shouldn't be. It's all HDCP 2.2
compliant. Every last HDMI port. I promise. It says so right there
on the front of the receiver and all over the TV's spec sheet. WHY
CAN'T I JUST WATCH THE MOVIE? Ah, that's right. Rollouts are
supposed to be buggy! Hair is supposed to be pulled! Curses cursed!
Dammit Dolls dammited! Fine. Check the firmware. It's all up to
date. Double check the specs. They're fine. Double check the
cabling. Fine. It's all checking out. Something is amiss in
UHDville. Then, a solution: ensure that the TV's HDMI port is set
to "enhanced" rather than "standard." That got rid of the HDCP 2.2
error message, but it caused another problem. My old standby 1080p
Blu-ray player, a Sony BDP-S790, didn't like that change on the TV.
When beginning A-B comparisons on The Martian, using the Samsung
for, of course, the UHD version and the Sony for the 1080p version
(many thanks to 20th Century Fox for including both discs in the
retail package), the Sony lost audio. Why? Who knows. Nothing else
lost audio, not the connected DirecTV box, not any of the connected
game consoles. It's all going through the same HDMI chain via the
receiver. That's not going to cut it, particularly since changing
the HDMI format on the TV requires a hard restart. We want
convenience with our technology, not a laundry list of steps to get
everything up and running.
So it was back to "standard" for the HDMI port that connects the
receiver to the TV and time to add one more chain in the jungle of
wiring by making use of the Samsung's dual HDMI outputs. That meant
bypassing the receiver on video and going straight to an open HDMI
port on the TV. It also meant using the Samsung's dedicated HDMI
audio out port to connect to the receiver to enjoy sound properly
through my Klipsch surround setup rather than through the TV's nice
but, for me, needless speakers. That still requires changing the
TV's input (and setting it up for "enhanced"), but at least that
doesn't necessitate a hard restart every time. Now, everything
should be working…right?
agentsands
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Kinothread - DB Import