Valve: HDMI Forum Continues to Block HDMI 2.1 for Linux

Posted by OsrsNeedsf2P 1 day ago

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Comment by Trung0246 1 day ago

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

AIUI the spec being leaked ironically makes things worse, because for an unofficial implementation to be legally kosher it would have to be clean-room reverse engineered anyway, and since the official spec is out there the integrity of such an effort would be called into doubt. You'd somehow have to prove you didn't look at it, ever, or at least be trusted enough for people to take your word for it.

(I'm not a lawyer, please correct me if I'm wrong)

Comment by brokenmachine 1 day ago

Reading a standards spec to understand what the device you paid for does?

Straight to jail!

Pirating the entire internet to train your AI?

That's fair use.

Comment by bobdvb 1 day ago

They're wrong, there's nothing stopping you implementing anything you like, you just can't use the HDMI brand without complying with their rules.

Comment by xg15 1 day ago

This sounds too easy to be true.

Does the "brand" include the physical shape of the connector?

Could I make hardware with a "NotHDMI" port that "happens" to be mechanically compatible with HDMI plugs, has the exact same pinout, etc etc?

Even then: In the OP case the hardware is already there, it's only about the driver. So wouldn't a driver for hardware that very clearly identifies the port as "HDMI" run into the same problem, even if the driver itself never mentions the term?

Comment by einsteinx2 2 hours ago

> Could I make hardware with a "NotHDMI" port that "happens" to be mechanically compatible with HDMI plugs, has the exact same pinout, etc etc?

Yes there are a bunch of products that do exactly this, sometimes with the same pin out and used for video output to HDMI compatible screens (internal HDMI mods for consoles are an example), other ones that use it for completely different purposes like controller ports (the Bliss-Box adapters and MiSTeR SNAC controllers). They just can’t use the HDMI name. In fact a few of those HDMI console mods started with HDMI in their product names and changes them for exactly that reason (e.g. DCHDMI now called DCDigital for the Sega Dreamcast).

Comment by bobdvb 21 hours ago

No, the connectors wouldn't be regulated, you're not violating any IP by buying them and there's no prohibition on any of the manufacturers selling them to unlicensed companies. At worst you can assert a patent against the design but there's no specific patent for that design, there are patents for some aspects of the design/implementation but they're hold by the manufacturers of the connectors themselves.

There have been many examples in the past of consumer electronics companies selling things that are electrically and logically compatible with HDMI, but they just have to avoid using the word HDMI.

Probably one thing that the HDMI forum is holding over AMD/Valve is that there's an API to manage some of the functions of the HDMI driver. They could infer that this API is a part of the closed standards of HDMI Forum. But 90% of the threat is about certification and branding I am sure.

Comment by extraduder_ire 1 day ago

You reminded me of the flipper zero video game module[0] with it's "video out port" which "transmits a video signal in DVI-D format to an external TV, monitor, or projector".

They are not quite the size of Valve though, and can expect people to figure out what that that port is.

0: https://docs.flipper.net/zero/video-game-module

Comment by aleph_minus_one 22 hours ago

They just used the well-known PicoDVI implementation that exists for the Raspberry Pi Pico:

> https://picockpit.com/raspberry-pi/raspberry-pi-pico-video-o... (scroll down to "DVI")

> https://github.com/Wren6991/PicoDVI

Comment by qmarchi 1 day ago

I mean, have you seen "TF Card" slots?

Comment by mmmlinux 23 hours ago

I’ve been waiting for the “TF card” version of HDMI for a while.

Comment by mrandish 7 hours ago

> you just can't use the HDMI brand

Hmmm, okay so maybe HDNI: High-Definition Not Incumbered.

Comment by cookiengineer 19 hours ago

That's why we have to train LLMs to infringe patents and implement them. That's fair use by their own logic.

Comment by xg15 1 day ago

Can we just train an AI with the spec and then vibe code an implementation?

Comment by _carbyau_ 1 day ago

I hope someone can do this in such a manner as to engineer the collision of the legal titans. Either way, we win on some ground.

IP vs AI, round two, Fight!!!

Comment by chii 1 day ago

> IP vs AI, round two, Fight!!!

I want to hear an EPIC RAP BATTLE OF HISTORY version of this.

Comment by mmmlinux 23 hours ago

ChatGPT VERSus HDMI Forum BEGIN!

Comment by intothemild 1 day ago

Just get said AI to write it yourself for my own hardware.. come get me HDMI law nerds!

Comment by eptcyka 1 day ago

I have thought about writing a python web framework were instead of writing a function that handles a request, you write a docstring and the an AI JIT generates your handling code. Could we not just prompt-engineer a solution for the missing bits in the driver for the HDMI2 stuff and have it be lazily generated via a model parameter and an API key? And then, in about 10 years, we could just do it locally once the models become runnable on commodity hardware. What a future too look forward to.

Comment by Gracana 1 day ago

This is not a web framework, but it's pretty close to what you've imagined: https://github.com/JirkaKlimes/jit-implementation

Comment by J_Shelby_J 1 day ago

Depends on if you can fund a defense all the way to the Supreme Court.

Comment by SkiFire13 1 day ago

Changes are the leaked spec might already be in the popular LLMs' training data, so you could probably skip to step 2 without having to do the (potentially problematic) training yourself.

Comment by GuestFAUniverse 1 day ago

Are you ridiculing the concept of imaginary property?

It does make sense. If you are on the money receiving side.

On the other side: do you pay license fees to your parents, your teachers, ... everybody you ever learnt from? No? Why not? Didn't everybody learn by copying first?

What about imitation? What does freedom of art and science even mean? You call it parody. I call it theft.

See. You need the contradionary concept of imaginary property. Otherwise, how do we get rich quick? Live performance, consultation, teaching? Nah, those are for loosers... Rent seeking it is.

/s

Comment by thayne 1 day ago

Innocence until proven guilty should mean the burden of proof is on the prosecutor to prove you actually looked at it right? Although that isn't necessarily how it works in the real world. IANAL.

But I also don't understand how they would enforce that you can't use a leaked spec. If there are patents involved that would hinder an open source implementation regardless of if it was clean room or not. I don't think copyright would apply, because the implementation is not the same as the spec. And trademark would only apply if you used hdmi branding materials (so just say something like "this driver provides compatibility with an interface that has been hostile to open source that starts with h and ends with i"), and if you use a leaked spec, you didn't sign any contracts saying you can't implement it.

Comment by sgjohnson 1 day ago

> Innocence until proven guilty should mean the burden of proof is on the prosecutor to prove you actually looked at it right?

It wouldn't be criminal, just civil, and civil trials have much lower standard for the burden of proof. It's just preponderance of evidence (more likely than not), instead of beyond all reasonable doubt.

Comment by thayne 20 hours ago

The level of proof required is lower, but AFAIU, the burden of proof is on the prosecutor, not the defendent.

Comment by themafia 1 day ago

The game is getting sued by the HDMI forum. It doesn't matter how "clean" your implementation was. They're just going to sue you _anyways_.

Comment by friendzis 1 day ago

IIUC, the problem is a bit tautological. Regardless of legality of reverse engineering itself, HDMI is a trademark which you obviously cannot use without being licensed. Using HDMI connector itself is probably a grey-ish area: while you can buy the connectors without agreeing to any licenses and forwarding compliance on vendor, it would still be hard to argue that you had no idea it was a HDMI connector. If you are using the HDMI connector, but are not sending anything else but DVI over it, it should be fine-ish.

The real problem starts when you want to actually support HDMI 2.0 and 2.1 on top. Arguing that you have licenced for 2.0 and then tacked a clean-room implementation of 2.1 on top gets essentially impossible.

Comment by johncolanduoni 1 day ago

For stuff like connectors, this gets worked around by using terminology like “compatible with HDMI” all the time. You are explicitly permitted to reference your competitor’s products, including potential compatibility, by trademark law. I suspect the risk here is mostly contractural - AMD likely signed agreements with the HDMI forum a long time ago that restrict their disclosure of details from the specification.

Comment by Xss3 16 hours ago

Im shocked i had to scroll so far to find a real hard stop blocker mentioned.

Valve has no reason to care about using the HDMI trademark. Consumers dont care if it says HDMI 2.1 or HMDI 2.1 Compatible.

The connector isnt trademarked and neither is compatibility.

The oss nature of isnt one either as valve could just release a compiled binary instead of open sourcing it.

The 'get sued for copying the leak' argument implies someone would actually fancy going toe to toe with valves legal team which so far have rekt the eu, activision, riot games, microsoft, etc. in court.

Proving beyond doubt that valve or their devs accessed the leaks would be hard. Especially if valve were clever from the get go, and lets face it, they probably were. Theyre easily one of the leanest, most profitable, and savviest software companies around.

Comment by bobdvb 1 day ago

HDMI's gate is certification and the ability to then use their marketing brand.

This is absolutely not a technical issue. You can implement the 2.1 spec if you want, you just can't say it's 2.1.

If Valve wanted they could happily get it to work and let people figure out that it works, they just can't use that title in their marketing.

Comment by friendzis 1 day ago

IIUC the issue is not them being unable to implement 2.1 at all, but rather provide specifically open source implementation. They probably could provide a binary blob.

Comment by bobdvb 21 hours ago

That's probably how NVidia did it.

But there's very little software involved in HDMI, it's mostly hardware and a control API.

Comment by crote 1 day ago

The connector itself shouldn't be an issue, because it doesn't fall under IP. The shape of the connector is entirely functional, so there's no creative work involved, so it would fall under patent law. However, the connector itself is unlikely to be innovative enough to be patentable, so it's not protected by patent law either.

Using HDMI connectors is totally fine. You just can't label it as "has HDMI port", as "HDMI" is a trademark.

Comment by ukd1 1 day ago

Is that true? There is obviously some creative work in connector design - optimizing for looks, robustness to damage, dirt, easy of use, reliability technically, etc.

Comment by grishka 1 day ago

I've seen HDMI devices for sale on AliExpress that list their port as "HDMI-compatible" or just "HD" to avoid that certification requirement.

Comment by rcxdude 1 day ago

AFAIK clean-room reverse engineering is sufficient but not always necessary for such an implementation to be allowed, but it does make the fair use argument a bit more difficult. (and of course the DMCA criminalizes any reverse engineering of 'technical safeguards' regardless of how you do it)

Comment by bobdvb 1 day ago

The spec is open to them and this isn't an IP issue, it's a branding issue.

Comment by kevin_thibedeau 1 day ago

Clean room RE isn't legally required. It just makes a stronger defense against claims of infringement.

Comment by bobdvb 1 day ago

They don't really have to worry about patent infringement, the biggest issue is that they can implement anything they want, they just can't call it HDMI 2.1 without certification.

That's confusing for the consumer but technically viable.

HDMI exists to write standards, to certify them and to enforce the brand integrity. Patents are a different issue and would be handled separately.

(I am an engineer who spent half his career dealing with this stuff at a technical, legal and commercial level).

Comment by account42 1 day ago

> they just can't call it HDMI 2.1 without certification

The problem is more that they can't use the HDMI trademark at all, not just for the HDMI 2.1 on Linux implementation. That makes it a non-starter for AMD or Valve, but in theory should not stop an individual who doesn't care about marketing anything as being HDMI-compatible.

Comment by GoblinSlayer 1 day ago

Clean room reverse engineering produces specification when you don't have it. When you have specification, you don't have to reverse engineer it.

Comment by literallywho 1 day ago

>You'd somehow have to prove you didn't look at it, ever, or at least be trusted enough for people to take your word for it.

How could one prove a negative? It's supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, isn't it? They'd have to prove that you've looked at the spec files.

Comment by ranger_danger 23 hours ago

> innocent until proven guilty

In the US at least, for criminal cases, the burden of proof for guilt is "beyond a reasonable doubt". For civil cases they are much more lenient and use the "reasonable person" standard.

Comment by danschuller 1 day ago

Probably now or the very near future you could have an LLM that's provably trained on dataset where the leaked spec isn't included in the dataset and have it perform the reverse engineering work.

Comment by mxkopy 1 day ago

As someone who’s excited to see this happen eventually, it’s not happening anytime soon. Combinatorial optimization techniques are far better suited for this and methods created 50 years ago run laps around LLMs

Comment by exe34 23 hours ago

> You'd somehow have to prove you didn't look at it

You can't prove something that didn't happen, unless you were monitored your whole life or at least from the moment the item came into being. It's an unreasonable level of proof.

Comment by hedora 1 day ago

Summarizing this thread:

- I paid for a device with a properly licensed hdmi port. It runs linux. So patent exhaustion applies, at least in the US. I can say ignore the patents to make my property work.

- I have no relationship to the HDMI people. (Never entered into a contract with them.)

- The links to the spec are here. (Trade secrets/nda no longer apply. This is the problem with using trade secrets to protect your stuff.)

- If I point a coding assistant (assume open weights/source) at this thread, and a copy of linux main, it can probably just fix the damn driver.

- I could probably publish my patch with a big fat “only for use with licensed hdmi hardware, not for resale” disclaimer on it.

At that point, what law would I have broken?

Comment by jokoon 1 day ago

The problem is that software distributors might break laws if the said drivers lands on unlicensed hdmi hardware, so they should be liable to check if the hardware is properly licensed, which might generate headaches.

Or maybe lawyers cannot anticipate everything that happens in court, so it just feels better to do things properly and not try to circumvent laws, especially when you're valve. It's better to not take risks.

Comment by cmiles74 1 day ago

I suspect Valve's plan is to embarrass the license holder in the hope that they back down. I doubt a court battle would be worth the money.

Comment by yxhuvud 1 day ago

Either that or just wait out the problem. As long as the linux gaming market keeps growing the incitaments for the hardware people to change their minds will increasingly be there.

Comment by mschuster91 1 day ago

What the (hardware) people want doesn't matter, at least as long as the IP owners have the deeper pockets.

"The market can stay irrational longer than you can remain solvent" is a pretty universal saying, and it also applies here - the rational thing for MAFIAA et al would be to give up and engage in universal licensing schemes similar to the lesson the music industry learned well over a decade ago. There, you have virtually every single mainstream artist/band available everywhere... Apple Music, Youtube Music, Spotify, Amazon Music, Tidal, Qobuz and I'm sure I forgot a bunch. Piracy in music has all but vanished as a result.

We could have had that with Netflix, and a lot of IP catalogs actually were on Netflix, but because of naked greed it all splintered up, and everyone is running their own distinct streaming silos again.

Comment by yxhuvud 5 hours ago

The thing about this kind of hardware standard is that the dominant hardware makers control the IP owners. Copyright is a totally different ballgame.

Comment by mschuster91 1 day ago

The problem is, while Valve has balls of tungsten... MAFIAA et al have the money, much much more of it.

It makes a good underdog story, but unless Valve goes all-in and flashes a notification to every American Steam user "hey, write to your Congress reps to pass a law to fix this shit, and call their office every day until they publicly relent", no PR can force their hand. It took many years for Right to Repair bills to pass, and many of these only succeeded because the people pushing for it (aka farmers) are very well connected to their representatives and have very deep pockets of money.

The other solution is of course mass protests over civil disobedience to outright violence. That can work to force change as well, we've seen many a law changed in the past (most recently at scale during the Covid pandemic), but I don't see any big-tent movement going on against big-co extortion practices.

Comment by thayne 1 day ago

> The problem is that software distributors might break laws if the said drivers lands on unlicensed hdmi hardware

Assuming the diatributor doesn't claim the software or device is hdmi licensed, what laws would they be breaking?

Comment by ruined 16 hours ago

debian and arch package managers ask you to accept EULAs when necessary to install, so the compliance infrastructure exists.

i think they are configured to auto-accept by default but that's been fine so far hasn't it

Comment by mft_ 1 day ago

Would it be feasible for a driver patch to be shared via e.g. an anonymous torrent, with a checksum (to certify authenticity) held somewhere more reliable, like GitHub?

Comment by mikepurvis 1 day ago

Sounds like what we used to go through years ago with sound editors that had to have a separate button for downloading and inserting the MP3 encoder because the Fraunhofer license prohibited it from being directly distributed with the software.

Comment by account42 1 hour ago

No, with MP3 the encoders/decoders source code was always available in the normal source code repositories (e.g. FFMPEG) - the problem was just with binary distributions.

Comment by tucnak 1 day ago

This is still the case in Audacity... doesn't rip mp3's out the box.

Comment by cartoonworld 1 day ago

Sure it does, it just always relied on external encoders.

I use audacity for recording vinyl occasionally, but for CD audio I have a bunch of cli scripts. Much easier.

Comment by bdavbdav 21 hours ago

If those external encoders are there. That’s the “non-free” checkbox / package in Linux.

Comment by binkHN 1 day ago

Post the patch in a country that doesn't care? I remember OpenBSD used to do something similar with encryption to get around US laws.

Comment by rtpg 1 day ago

I think Canonical did this with codecs for a long time too, behind a prompt

Comment by extraduder_ire 1 day ago

Linux mint didn't need to ask due to being released from France, where software patents did not apply.

Comment by aoeusnth1 1 day ago

Maybe nothing, but can you afford to prove that in court?

Comment by bobdvb 1 day ago

I need to post this everywhere:

THIS ISN'T AN IP/PATENT ISSUE!

This is branding and marketing issue. Anyone can implement the spec, it doesn't need to be a cleanroom implementation. It's almost certain that you could license the patents from the patent holders because HDMI doesn't develop it's own patentable stuff, they just get it from Sony, Panasonic, etc.

THIS IS A MARKETING / BRANDING ISSUE.

Saying they don't want an open source implementation is just a smokescreen. 99% of the implementation is in hardware anyway.

Comment by heeen2 1 day ago

So you're saying they could just make the driver compliant without advertising compliance under the hdmi logo? similar to how e.g. oneplus shipped phones without advertising their higher IPX rating because certification would have cost too much, or chinese electronics supporting "tf card" instead of "micro sd card" but being compatible anyways

Comment by IsTom 1 day ago

So why don't AMD and Valve release ICan'tBeliveit'sNotHDMI2.1 drivers?

Comment by userbinator 1 day ago

If you take the effort to anonymise your contributions, can they afford to try to find you?

Comment by firesteelrain 1 day ago

It’s not about individual users. It’s about Valve redistributing it.

Comment by hedora 1 day ago

This affects 100% of linux boxes with an hdmi port, so valve is making a tiny fraction of the impacted hardware.

Comment by firesteelrain 1 day ago

My point was that the HDMI Foundation/Org isn’t going after hobbyists at home.

But if a hobbyist were to sell an unlicensed HDMI 2.1 box then the IP holder would likely go after them.

In their eyes, in that case, the IP is being pirated.

This is very similar to h.264 however however in that case the standard is public, commercial use requires paying a fee. Licensing of the HDMI 2.1 specification requires an NDA for specification testing that Valve is not able to perform in order to say that it is a HDMI 2.1 compliant system. They would be running afoul of the HDMI org’s licensing terms.

Comment by ethin 1 day ago

We really need to just force all standards organizations to release their standards for free. No making you pay $300 or whatever for a standard. (The PCI SIG makes you pay like $5000 for access to the PCIe standard...)

Comment by mahkoh 1 day ago

VESA makes you pay $5000 to get legal access to the DisplayPort standard. That is not the issue here.

Comment by ethin 1 day ago

It is part of the issue here. This specific post is about the HDMI forum having an insanely restrictive NDA, but the broader problem of SDOs charging obscene amounts of money for what amounts to trivially reproduceable digital documents (or taking other measures to do everything they can to seal the standards from the public unless your willing to pay the obscene fees or <insert other absurd measure here>) is relevant to this post, and this comment, since the HDMI forum is doing exactly this kind of gatekeeping; it only differs in form, but not function.

Comment by jrepinc 1 day ago

Yeah HDMI Forum shameful behavior in a way reminds me of those evil greedy scientific publishing houses. Standards and science should be open and free as in freedom to access AND implement and not gated behind some obscene monetary or other forms of restrictions, like patents. In this day and age these restrictions have no place and should be abolished.

Comment by BlueTemplar 1 day ago

So should HDCP. And DMCA. And platforms. And DRM in general.

But this is basically asking for the USA to give up on their soft power (Hollywood, and over the Internet). It's something to aim for, but is still going to take decades.

And you have to be careful about what might fill the power void (China, Russia...)

Comment by TheAmazingRace 1 day ago

Indeed. I'm pretty sure the issue is that the HDMI Consortium wants some kind of royalty for each device sold with a proper HDMI designation, whereas VESA doesn't care if you sell one device or a million devices with DisplayPort. You owe them nothing extra beyond the initial legal access fee.

Oh yeah, and the burdensome NDA that the HDMI Consortium requires its partners to agree to is another serious problem for the Linux driver.

Comment by VerifiedReports 1 day ago

Another example of something that shouldn't be accepted as a standard. If you want to be a standard, then the spec must be published to the public. DUH.

It's sad what people put up with now.

Comment by all2 1 day ago

These are standard business practices. They own IP. People want to use that IP. They say "pay us X to use our IP". People throw a tantrum because money. Instead, people want to capitalize on someone else's hard work for free.

I understand the ideas behind open source, and I think they are excellent. But I also understand that people and the businesses they operate want to make money.

Comment by AnthonyMouse 1 day ago

> They own IP. People want to use that IP. They say "pay us X to use our IP".

The general premise of patents and copyrights is that you're going to do some development work and then you get an exclusive right that yields a competitive advantage.

Standards are different. The purpose of the standard is that Alice wants her output device to be compatible with everyone else's input device and Bob wants his input device to be compatible with everyone else's output device.

There is no competitive advantage to be had because the very premise is that everyone possible is going to implement it to maximize the network effect. And the entire industry has the incentive to want the standard to be good and put whatever good ideas they have into it because they're all stuck with it if it isn't. Meanwhile because of the network effect, everyone has to implement the standard because if they come up with their own thing -- even if it's better -- it wouldn't be compatible.

So all of the normal incentives from copyrights and patents are wrong. You can't gain a competitive advantage from it, companies have a preexisting incentive to make it good even without an exclusive right, and someone who doesn't want to pay doesn't have the option to try to do better on their own because of the network effect. And the network effect makes it an antitrust concern.

The result is that NDAs and royalties on standards are just a shakedown and the law shouldn't allow them.

Comment by rtpg 1 day ago

> Standards are different. The purpose of the standard is that Alice wants her output device to be compatible with everyone else's input device and Bob wants his input device to be compatible with everyone else's output device.

I do think there's value and a lot of work in coming up with a standard that manufacturers agree on. It's a huge coordination problem, based on the idea of unlinking a standard's success with the success of, say, a hardware competitor. It's real work! And like.... HDMI is an invention, right? If that isn't then what is?

"we should have drivers for the hardware that relies on this tech" just feels like an obvious win to me though. The (short-term) ideal here is just the forum being like "yes it's good if HDMI 2.1 works on linux" and that being the end of the story

I don't have much love for things that mean that like VGA info online all being "we reverse engineered this!!!" so they're not my friends but I wouldn't succeed much at standards coordination

Comment by AnthonyMouse 1 day ago

> I do think there's value and a lot of work in coming up with a standard that manufacturers agree on. It's a huge coordination problem, based on the idea of unlinking a standard's success with the success of, say, a hardware competitor. It's real work!

It's work they would be doing anyway because they all benefit from it, which is why it isn't a coordination problem. The known and effective coordination solution is a standards body. Everyone sends their representative in to hash out how the standard should work. They all have the incentive to do it because they all want a good standard to exist.

Moreover, the cost of developing the standard is a minor part of the total costs of being in the industry, so nobody has to worry about exactly proportioning a cost which is only a rounding error to begin with and the far larger problem is companies trying to force everyone else to license their patents by making them part of the standard, or using a standard-essential patent to impose NDAs etc.

> And like.... HDMI is an invention, right? If that isn't then what is?

It's not really a single invention, but that's not the point anyway.

Patenting something which is intrinsically necessary for interoperability is cheating, because the normal limit on what royalties or terms you can impose for using an invention is its value over the prior art or some alternative invention, whereas once it's required for interoperability you're now exceeding the value of what you actually invented by unjustly leveraging the value of interoperating with the overall system and network effect.

Comment by rtpg 15 hours ago

> It's work they would be doing anyway because they all benefit from it, which is why it isn't a coordination problem

HDMI: tech is shared between you and competitors, but you don't get to collect all the licensing fees for yourself

Some bespoke interface: you can make the bet that your tech is so good that you get to have control over it _and_ you get to license it out and collect all the fees

in the standards case, the standards body will still charge licensing fees but there's an idea that it's all fair play.

Apple had its lightning cable for its iPhones. It collaborated with a standards body for USB-C stuff. Why did it make different decisions there? Because there _are_ tradeoffs involved!

(See also Sony spending years churning through tech that it tried to unilaterally standardize)

Comment by AnthonyMouse 14 hours ago

> HDMI: tech is shared between you and competitors, but you don't get to collect all the licensing fees for yourself

> Some bespoke interface: you can make the bet that your tech is so good that you get to have control over it _and_ you get to license it out and collect all the fees

Except that these are alternatives to each other. If it's your bespoke thing then there are no licensing fees because nobody else is using it. Moreover, then nobody else is using it and then nobody wants your thing because it doesn't work with any of their other stuff.

Meanwhile it's not about whether something is a formal standard or not. The government simply shouldn't grant or enforce patents on interoperability interfaces, in the same way and for the same reason that it shouldn't be possible to enforce a copyright over an API.

Comment by kasabali 1 day ago

> HDMI is an invention, right?

DVI was an invention.

HDMI just added DRM on top of it.

Comment by samplatt 1 day ago

That's definitely a thing that happened, but it's minimising so much other important work that it's misrepresenting the whole thing.

Do you know how much bandwidth six channels of uncompressed audio needs? Home theaters would be a HUGE hassle without a single cable doing all that work for you.

Comment by crote 1 day ago

ADAT Lightpipe supports up to 8 audio channels at 48 kHz and 24 bits - all using standard off-the-shelf Toslink cables and transceivers. MADI can do significantly more.

Let's not pretend surround sound is a nearly-impossible problem only HDMI could possibly solve.

Comment by samplatt 11 hours ago

I... think you might be proving my point for me? The ability to have a single cable that can do video AND a bunch of audio channels at once is amazing for the average joe.

Don't get me wrong, I use optical in my setup at home & I'd love to have more studio & scientific gear just for the hell of it, but I'm the minority.

I'm not trying to defend the HDMI forum or the greedy arsehole giants behind them. The DRM inbuilt to HDMI and the prohibitive licensing of the filters (like atmos) is a dick move and means everything is way more expensive than it needs to be. Was just pointing out that parent's comment was reductive.

Comment by zephen 11 hours ago

> Do you know how much bandwidth six channels of uncompressed audio needs?

Yeah.

Half the bandwidth of USB 1.0.

Or, in terms of more A/V kinds of things, about two percent of original firewire.

Comment by yturijea 1 day ago

I would say a fair compensation for the original work is fair, until certain threshold, after which they must invent new thing rather than continued benefit of an existing. Say once they earned 400% of valuation or cost of invention or similar. there could be a system in place. But of course the people to regulate this has a natural bias, as they themselves would be hurt by it, most likely. So the vast majority, ie. the public is at an disadvantage, greed wins again.

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by wat10000 1 day ago

Where does "invention" end and "standard" begin? If I come up with a new and better way to transmit video between devices, should I be allowed to charge for the right to interoperate with it? What if I don't want any interoperability and it's just for my own hardware? What if I just want certain select partners?

Comment by cwel 1 day ago

>Should I be allowed to charge for the right to interoperate with it?

No.

>What if ... just for my own hardware?

No.

>What if I just want certain select partners?

Sure, you can select between the DoD or Langley.

Comment by wat10000 1 day ago

So anything which communicates between two pieces of hardware wouldn’t be covered by IP laws?

Comment by barnabee 1 day ago

Yes. It seems pretty obviously true to me that there should be no legal right to prevent interoperability and no recourse against adversarial interoperability.

The right to say "Compatible with X" or similar where X is a brand should also be protected.

Comment by wat10000 21 hours ago

So I sit down and invent some wonderful new interconnect. It would be be a big advantage to put it into certain kinds of video equipment. I don't make any video equipment, so I license it to companies that do. Should this be impossible? New communications tech should only be created as trade secrets, by industry-wide consortia, or altruists?

This is getting close to arguing against IP as a general concept. Which I don't really object to very strongly, but presenting it as a special carveout for communication doesn't make sense to me.

Comment by selfhoster11 1 day ago

Ideally, yes.

Comment by parineum 1 day ago

[flagged]

Comment by regularfry 1 day ago

Like the IETF, you mean? If I want to implement general internet-compatible timestamps, RFC3339 is right here: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3339.

How about something big: TCP? RFC9293. It's here: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9293.

HTML? Different organisation but the same idea, it's over here: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/

You're reading this web page because of standards organisations that gave everything away for free for anyone to implement.

Comment by themafia 1 day ago

> Instead, people want to capitalize on someone else's hard work for free.

This would only make sense if there _wasn't_ free video standards competing with HDMI. How is it that one group managed to do this for free yet the other group charges clearly exorbitant rates for a nearly equivalent product.

> They own IP.

That isn't nearly as valuable as they say it is. They only do this to prevent piracy and not to promote any useful technical standard.

> People want to use that IP.

People are _forced_ to because the same group practically gives away their technology under certain conditions so their connectors get added to nearly every extant device. I don't _want_ to use HDMI. I'm simply _forced_ to through market manipulation.

> want to make money.

Selling drugs would earn them more money. Why don't we tolerate that? It could be, under some torturous logic, be just another "standard business practice." In fact looking at our laws I see tons of "standard business practices" that are now flatly illegal.

The law is a tool. It can be changed. It should be changed. The citizens pay for 85% of it and while businesses only pay 7%. Why do their "standard practices" hold a candle to the "needs of the citizens."

Comment by wildzzz 1 day ago

It all stems from the companies behind the HDMI authority. It's basically all of the major AV device makers circa early 2000s. They wrote the spec and added it to all of their products. Displayport wasn't around just yet so HDMI just beat it to market. Since everyone needed an HDMI thing to go with their HDMI thing, everyone else jumped on the HDMI bandwagon. Although I'm really not sure how HDMI managed to get it's way into PCs. Displayport should have just cornered the entire market, it's very popular on business-class machines. I'm guessing it's because of HTPCs and people wanting to put big TVs on their PCs is what led to the adoption.

Comment by larusso 1 day ago

I think the HDMI connectors popped up at the same time screens switched from 16:10 (VESA compatible at the time) to 16:9 to be more cost effective for the manufacturers. But I’m not sure why. I looked at graphicscards and wondered why HDMI suddenly gained traction in the PC space even after the release of DisplayPort. I think this should never have happened.

Comment by ethin 1 day ago

Same thing applies to PCI. I can get USB specs for free from USB-IF. But the PCI and PCIe specs cost $4000 plus. Just so I can write my own PCI driver. Legally, I mean. Oh, there is external references, but what if I want the authoritative documentation? Should I have to pay thousands and thousands for access (!) to a standard that is ubiquitous in every sense of the word? There is, to me, a point at which ubiquity trumps any "IP rights" the standards org would have.

Comment by johncolanduoni 1 day ago

What free video standards are competing with HDMI? DisplayPort has its own patent pool.

Comment by themafia 1 day ago

How quickly everyone forgot DVI-D. Aside from non-RGB modes, hey, it's almost _exactly_ HDMI.

Comment by johncolanduoni 1 day ago

That’s true for earlier iterations, but definitely not for an actual HDMI 2.1 signal. I think you can still connect to a DVI-D monitor and the source will automatically downgrade, but I haven’t tried it in a very long time.

Comment by samplatt 1 day ago

DVI-D doesn't carry audio; HDMI can do a bunch of uncompressed channels simultaneously.

Comment by observationist 1 day ago

Yes, and we should say "no more making money from stupid things like secret technical standards"

Copyright and patent protection is afforded under the principle that said protections grant concurrent value to the people as is granted to the holder of the rights. Stuff like HDMI specs gatekeeping simply allows a select group of people to exploit licensing and seek rent. It doesn't provide any benefit to the people of the US whatsoever, and the fundamental principle by which the rights were granted is violated.

Copyright and patent protection is intended to incentivize and reward creativity, not to allow conglomerates of IP hoarders and patent trolls to exploit legal gotchas, to allow endless rent seeking, or empower megacorps to mass file endless vague patents so as to provide endless legal challenges to small competitors.

Copyright and patent law as currently implemented and practiced are fundamentally broken and far diverged from any principled, meaningful benefit to the people.

There are what, 2 publishers now? Five nines of commercially viable patents go to megacorps and universities? Seven nines of all music and media belong to conglomerates of one sort or another? Something like that.

I understand the intent of the original implementations of copyright, and maybe the laws even made sense for a few years, but either they were corrupt from the start, or they were so badly written that they never had a shot at achieving any sort of meaningful ROI for the price paid by the public.

Comment by johncolanduoni 1 day ago

How much money could PCI SIG possibly be making for the rightsholders with those fees? They’re not charged to members, they’re not per-seat (so each company only needs to pay once even if they have 100 engineers that need to read it), and they don’t include patent licenses for shipping actual hardware. Nobody’s business model is threatened even slightly by making the standards public.

And as we saw with AV1 vs H.265, the IP encumbrance of multiparty standards can create barriers that kill their adoption and the corresponding ability for rightsholders to make money off them. It looks like that family of encodings is going to die off, with basically zero interest from anybody in licensing H.266 when you’ll be able to build AV2 software and hardware for free.

Comment by nottorp 1 day ago

> Instead, people want to capitalize on someone else's hard work for free.

Are you sure that's what's in play here? I don't think anyone gives a shit about using HDMI. They want video and audio to work on their TV.

Now tell me how many TVs with non-HDMI ports are out there, and tell me with a straight face that it isn't due to pressure from the "consortium".

Edit: by the way the video signaling was identical between DVI and HDMI in the beginning. So whose hard work was it?

Comment by perching_aix 1 day ago

"Hard work" is the worst way to make money at scale, so that argument rings more than just a little hollow, especially when defending access control based moneymaking.

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

Anti competitive "standard business practices" should be counteracted with good enough competition law that forbids them. As simple as that. So I totally agree with the above comment. They simply shouldn't be able to prevent open implementations.

Comment by gethly 1 day ago

you are confusing standards with patents.

Comment by softfalcon 1 day ago

When I'm in these situations, I try and put myself into the IP holder's shoes.

"if I spent the time, risk, effort, and money to develop the pre-eminent protocol and hardware used by most TV's in the world... would I want to give that work away for free?"

I think the answer is probably no for most people.

Because most of us are not the IP holder, they think this technology should just be free (as you stated earlier).

This lack of empathy and care for others (even IP holders) is largely why these draconian IP rules and contracts exist. It's why there are whole crazy NDAs around the HDMI spec. It's because every time someone is given even a slight look under the covers, they try and steal it, because it's worth a lot of money.

This is a nuanced variant of "this is why we can't have nice things" all over again.

Comment by rpdillon 1 day ago

> "if I spent the time, risk, effort, and money to develop the pre-eminent protocol and hardware used by most TV's in the world... would I want to give that work away for free?"

Only if you want people to use it. Developing a protocol is an investment in defining the direction a technology follows; the benefits are not best accrued by charging for access to the standard, but rather by leveraging the ability to direct the trend.

The alternative is that the licensing charge causes a bunch of stupid friction and prevents the standard from being truly universal.

EDIT: Implementing a standard is enough work, paying for the privilege to do so is often a non-starter.

Comment by dwattttt 1 day ago

> "if I spent the time, risk, effort, and money to develop the pre-eminent protocol and hardware used by most TV's in the world... would I want to give that work away for free?"

This is absolutely fine. But it should preclude them from becoming a public standard.

Comment by andybak 1 day ago

Devil's Advocate time. Would the result of that be better or worse quality public standards?

(I don't actually know what I think off the cuff - but it's the obvious follow on question to your statement and I don't think your statement can stand on it's own without a well argued counter)

Comment by dwattttt 1 day ago

It's a fine question. I think the onus is on public regulatory bodies responsible for the standards; if they aren't able to pay for the work to be published as an open standard, it wasn't worth the cost.

Comment by rcxdude 1 day ago

Standards also benefit the industry as a whole, and it's generally in the interests of the companies involves to participate in the standardisation process anyway. Charging for the description of them is just a cherry on top (compared to e.g. licensing any relevant patents), I don't believe it's at all required to incentivize a standardization process.

(this is of course looking at interoperation standards - regulatory bodies are going to be more concerned with e.g. safety standards)

Comment by throw0101a 1 day ago

> This is absolutely fine. But it should preclude them from becoming a public standard.

Define "public standard". And how is HDMI one of them?

HDMI is a private bundle of IP that the license holders are free to give (or not give) to anyone. We're not talking about a statue by a government 'of the people' what should be public. No one is mandated by any government to implement it AFAICT: and even if it was, it would be up to the government to make sure they only reference publicly available documents in laws.

Comment by shkkmo 1 day ago

The HDMI Forum isn't "most people", it's a non-profit run by some of the largest companies in the space that self describes this way.[1]

I think it is reasonable to complain when "someone" is being so hypocritical and arguably engaging in anti-competitive practices. How do the crazy NDAs in any way server the self stated mission of the forum?

> [1] https://hdmiforum.org/about/

Chartered as a nonprofit, mutual benefit corporation, the mission of the HDMI Forum is to:

    Create and develop new versions of the HDMI Specification and the Compliance Test Specification, incorporating new and improved functionality
    Encourage and promote the adoption and widespread use of its Specifications worldwide
    Support an ecosystem of fully interoperable HDMI-enabled products
    Provide an open and non-discriminatory licensing program with respect to its Specifications

Comment by archagon 1 day ago

The idea that you can “steal” knowledge and ideas is farcical. One reason why China is so good at iterating rapidly on technology is that this notion of intellectual “property” doesn’t really exist there. Any cool new invention is immediately iterated on by a hundred different makers.

And the reason to release a standard is to make your own products better. TVs would be awful if every manufacturer brought their own proprietary video connector to the table, and those manufacturers who grouped together to create a standard would accordingly dominate the market.

Comment by transcriptase 1 day ago

China quite literally and unambiguously stole trillions of dollars in IP, trade secrets, and data from research labs in the West by explicitly and systematically embedding spies, hacking, and blackmailing/threatening employees/students wherever economically beneficial information existed for nearly 20 years. And this is on top of the practice of CCP sanctioned theft from and screwing over of nearly every company that outsourced manufacturing there from 1990 onward. The fact that they finally have enough domestic knowledge to actually innovate as a result of that isn’t some testament to what you think it is.

If someone spends a billion dollars researching some new technology and you have someone exfiltrate the blueprints, improve on it slightly, and then undercut who you stole from in the market because you had no investment to recoup… you’re not some enlightened morally righteous free thinker. You’re just a parasite.

Comment by hparadiz 1 day ago

US did the same in the 19th century with Europe and it's part of how the country bootstrapped it's industrial revolution.

https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2018/07/30/ip_thef...

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by reactordev 1 day ago

It’s the same entitlement that determined one could just download all the content available online to train your models against.

Comment by crote 1 day ago

People would have far fewer problems with that if the resulting models were also released back to the general public.

Comment by archagon 1 day ago

Weird to call it entitlement when the natural state of information is to be free. What's entitled is asking the government to enforce arbitrary restrictions on other people making use of some information that you somehow intangibly "own."

(Of course, it's fucked up that corporations can siphon up all this content and then try to twist the law to carve out an exception for their extra special use case. Information still isn't free unless you're an AI company, I guess.)

Comment by kmeisthax 1 day ago

There's a difference between "infringing IP[1]", "stealing IP", and whatever we should call AI training. And it turns out the worse the behavior gets, the less likely the law is going to recognize it as bad.

IP infringement is what we're used to talking about. This is when I go and give a stranger a copy of some music I don't own. Or when some sketchy ass guy resells IPTV services to an entire island in Greece or whatever. They're not saying it's their work, they're just refusing to pay the appropriate licensing fee for it. And sometimes we might even agree that a license fee shouldn't have to be paid. What the Linux video driver people want is for the HDMI people to say "yes, you can tell people how to light up this video card in such a way that it successfully negotiates a connection at HDMI 2.1 bitrates", which shouldn't even be infringement at all, but here we are.

What China does is wholesale IP theft. They don't just make their own version of someone else's thing, or just do industrial espionage, they actively make an attempt to deny the original creator of their own work. This can include things like forcing foreign entities to go through a JV, or playing games with trademark law to allow domestic companies to actually take legal ownership over foreign works. This is why a lot of American companies spent time and money carrying water for Xi Jinping, despite it going against everything they claimed to stand for.

AI training doesn't fit in either mold. It's more like rugpulling human labor by turning know-how and creativity into ownable capital distinct from that of traditional copyright and patents. Copyright gives you ownership over your own work, but says nothing about having your entire craft being automated away by a robot that can turn your work into legally distinct knockoffs of it[0]. So we have an entirely new form of enclosure of the commons, where if you ever do a thing, someone else can turn that thing into their own property that everyone else can pay to rent. Like, to be clear: AI is not Napster. AI is the opposite of Napster. AI is the apotheosis of "you will own nothing and be happy".

[0] The only way that copyright claims on AI even sort of fit into recognizable harms is the fact that at some point a Facebook engineer pointed LLaMA's crawler at a torrent site. In fact, I kinda hate how this is sort of saying "well actually fair use only applies if you bought the book first". Which is a problem, because the condition of sale can be "don't make a fair use of it", and the only way to avoid that was to pirate the work and then make your fair use.

[1] As Cory Doctorow said, paraphrasing: Intellectual property is the laws that allow you to dictate the conduct of your competitors.

Comment by sharperguy 1 day ago

Or just repeal the laws that are being used to make them non-free.

Comment by crest 1 day ago

This fails even at the FRAND level because you're not "allowed" to implement it in open source software.

Comment by throw0101a 1 day ago

> This fails even at the FRAND level because you're not "allowed" to implement it in open source software.

The same conditions apply to everyone: they do not discriminate—the ND in FRAND—open versus closed source. Everyone gets the same contract/NDA to sign.

If there was one contract/NDA for closed source, and another for open source, that would be discriminatory.

Comment by crote 1 day ago

It's non-discriminatory, except for the part where the one contract is written in such a way as to exclude certain groups of potential users?

It's like making a law which forbids anyone without gold-threaded clothing from entering certain parts of the city: it doesn't discriminate against the poor, anyone with the right outfit can enter! Oh, poor people can't afford gold-threaded clothing? Sorry, that's just an unfortunate coincidence, nothing we can do about that...

Comment by throw0101a 1 day ago

Those potential users are self-imposing on themselves the need to be open source. There are no external, out-of-their-control factors making them 'be' open source (like there are with being poor, a certain gender, etc).

And for the record I do think it would there should be an (open source) HDMI 2.1 implementation in the Linux kernel, but I recognize the same IP law that protects HDMI licensing also allows enforcement of GPL/BSD licenses:

> Yes, I'd give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety's sake!

* https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0060665/quotes/

Comment by MaxBarraclough 1 day ago

From the article:

> At this time an open source HDMI 2.1 implementation is not possible without running afoul of the HDMI Forum requirements.

I wonder on what basis. Perhaps an obligation to ensure the software resists reverse-engineering?

Comment by throwaway2037 1 day ago

    > Perhaps an obligation to ensure the software resists reverse-engineering?
I assume that Blu-Ray is similar. As I understand, there are no fully open source implementations of a video decoder for Blu-Ray discs. (Is that still true in 2025?)

Comment by aleph_minus_one 1 day ago

> As I understand, there are no fully open source implementations of a video decoder for Blu-Ray discs. (Is that still true in 2025?)

As far as I am aware VLC Media Player is capable of playing blu ray dics:

> https://www.reddit.com/r/linux4noobs/comments/1ke5ysq/how_to...

but you have to install some additional files:

> https://wiki.videolan.org/VSG:Usage:Blu-ray/

> https://www.reddit.com/r/linux4noobs/comments/1ke5ysq/commen...

If this does not satisfy your claim "there are no fully open source implementations of a video decoder for Blu-Ray discs" tell me where I am wrong.

Comment by throwaway2037 1 day ago

Hat tip. I was unaware. When I looked deeper, it requires you to supply the encryption keys for each disc. I highly doubt this method is "approved" by the Blu-Ray consortium. I don't even know the legality in highly advanced economies.

Comment by VerifiedReports 1 day ago

Exactly. Proprietary, encumbered bullshit shouldn't be accepted as a standard. Period.

Comment by williamDafoe 1 day ago

Then you wouldn't have 3G cellular. Or 4G. Or 5G cellular. It costs tens of millions of dollars to drive around san diego in those vans taking traces of a new cellular system design and discovering improvements so that the standard works everywhere else on earth (San Diego is a worst case that's comparable to Hong Kong.). We wouldn't have CDMA cellular. Or LTE cellular. Recall that CDMA cellular was 3x more efficient in bits/second/Hz than 2G/GSM, so that cell phone providers could literally give you a free phone or PAY YOU to throw away your phone and they would still come out ahead, financially.

Comment by adrian_b 1 day ago

Your claim is weird.

No standard has ever been developed using money obtained by selling copies of the standard.

The kind of work described by you, which is indeed needed for developing a new communication standard cannot be made profitable by selling copies of a text describing its results.

If such work provides valuable techniques that are necessary for the implementation of the standard, they are patented and those who want to implement the standard for commercial purposes must license the patents.

Any owner of a device that implements a standard has the right to know what the standard does, so all standards should be distributed if not for free only for a small price covering the distribution expenses and not for the prices with many digits that are in use now.

The big prices that are requested for certain standards have a single purpose, to protect the incumbent companies from new competitors, or sometimes to prevent the owners of some devices to do whatever they want with what they own.

The very high prices that are demanded for many standards nowadays are a recent phenomenon, of the same kind with the fact that nowadays most sellers of electronic devices no longer provide schematics and maintenance manuals for them as it was the rule until a few decades ago, in order to force the owners to either never repair their devices or to repair them at a few authorized repair shops, which do not have competitors. These kinds of harmful behavior of the corporations have been made possible by the lack of adequate legislation for consumer protection, as the legislators in most countries are much less interested in making laws for the benefit of their voters than they are interested in things like facilitating the surveillance of the voters by the government, to prevent any opposition against unpopular measures.

In the more distant past, there was no way to download standards over the Internet for a negligible cost, but you could still avoid to pay for a printed standard by consulting it in a public library and making a copy. There were no secret standards that you could not access without paying a yearly subscription of thousands of $, like today.

Comment by semessier 1 day ago

> No standard has ever been developed using money obtained by selling copies of the standard.

unfortunately there are examples in the Telecom world

Comment by JAlexoid 1 day ago

Most of the development costs are recouped through licenses on the base-stations and somewhat on the very low patent licenses per chip/device, not the price of access to the standard.

Back to the the HDMI standard, the licensing fee has already been paid by the hardware manufacturer. Restricting software is unnecessary, as the patent license fees have already been collected on the device.

Comment by throwaway2037 1 day ago

Oh, interesting. Can you share some examples?

Comment by troupo 1 day ago

It also becomes an issue when governmental/public standards start referencing these.

Comment by MisterTea 1 day ago

> Then you wouldn't have 3G cellular. Or 4G. Or 5G cellular.

I don't get it. Why would making a standard freely accessible impede its adoption?

Comment by ethin 1 day ago

Yeah, I'm curious about this too. I would think that making a standard freely available (and at most doing what NVMe does where you pay membership dues) would make the standard be adopted far more universally than putting up weird barriers to even access the standard.

Comment by throwaway2037 1 day ago

    > and at most doing what NVMe does where you pay membership dues
No trolling: What is the difference between "pay[ing] membership dues" and paying a fee to access the standard (docs)? To me, they feel the same.

Comment by ethin 1 day ago

Honest answer (since your not trolling): The difference is more of time than anything else. If I somehow find $5000 to buy access to the PCIe spec, my understanding is that it's per access request. NVMe doesn't charge at all for their specifications; instead, you can join for just $500 per year last time I checked.

Comment by sleepybrett 1 day ago

He's claiming they wouldn't be developed because why develop a standard you can't cash in on.

Comment by pennomi 1 day ago

Which is silly, specifically for telecoms, because get don’t make their money on the standard, they make it on providing the service.

Comment by Kwpolska 1 day ago

In the telecom world, that would be a pretty terrible business model, as the list of entities who would need a copy of the standard is relatively short.

Comment by all2 1 day ago

The people developing standards are in the business of developing standards. It makes sense to want to make money on the thing you work on.

Comment by kalleboo 1 day ago

> The people developing standards are in the business of developing standards

Are they? Usually these standards consortiums are composed of the companies that develop products based on the standards, where their products gain value from having a standard (a Blu-ray player and a TV with no way to connect them together is worth less). Even if they couldn't gatekeep the standards they would still have developed them out of necessity.

Comment by crote 1 day ago

There is no business developing standards. All the technical parts are written by engineers from the various companies wanting to implement the standard. All that's left for the standards association is to host a mailing list and potentially organise some in-person meetings. And hosting the resulting PDF doesn't exactly cost $4000 / download either.

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by kmeisthax 1 day ago

That's what patents are for. The handful of standards that actually cost money to produce (i.e. MPEG, 3GPP, LTE etc) have patent holders that are specifically required to provide "fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory" licensing terms. If paywalling the spec paid for those standards we wouldn't have had a decade of HTML5 video not specifying a baseline codec.

Comment by jeffjeffbear 1 day ago

I don't think the fee to get access to the standard is generating much income for anyone. Most of what your talking about seems to be money made from licensing of the technology, right?

Comment by kalleboo 1 day ago

Bad example, the 3GPP standards are not at all closed like HDMI 2.1 is, unlike HDMI 2.1 there are open source implementations https://osmocom.org/projects

Comment by bigfatkitten 1 day ago

Are you referring to the 3GPP specifications that you, I or anyone else can go and read absolutely free of charge?

https://www.3gpp.org/

Comment by forrestthewoods 1 day ago

> Then you wouldn't have 3G cellular.

What does a specification being paywalled vs open have to do 3G cellular existing or not?

Comment by Am4TIfIsER0ppos 1 day ago

That sounds wonderful. A world without widespread high bandwidth wireless connectivity would be a better world.

Comment by klipklop 1 day ago

It's about time somebody does some reverse engineering and just uploads the needed stuff online to make HDMI 2.1 work in Linux. It's getting absurd at this point. TV's need to start including Displayport, HDMI is a giant pain in the ass for gamers.

Comment by TheAmazingRace 1 day ago

Not to mention, DisplayPort is the superior standard over HDMI in both technological terms as well as it being royalty free.

Comment by jorvi 1 day ago

Yes and no. HDMI CEC works pretty decent these days, all the kinks have been worked out over the years and the only time it bugs out is if you use Chinese brands (looking at you, TCL) that write horrid firmware and never fix any bugs found after release.

Displayport has DDC/CI, which allows you to adjust things like brightness, volume, etc. remotely. This has existed since the DVI era (!) which means Displayport had a huge headstart. But they never formalized and enforced the DDC/CI spec, which means every monitor has extremely weird quirks. Some will allow you to send and read data. Some will only allow you to send data and crash when you try to read. Some will update only once every few seconds.

Although in this specific case, one wonders why Valve didn't just use two Displayport 1.4 ports and and stuck an onboard HDMI converter in front of one of them, sourced from a company that would be amenable to having Valve work on the firmware of said converter. Make the entire firmware of the converter open source except for the binary blob that handles the Displayport 1.4 -> HDMI 2.1 bits.

Hopefully Valve does this but sells it as a external, high quality converter. It would be a nice little plus even for non-Steam Machine owners, same way like Apple's USB-C to 3.5mm convertor is the highest quality mini DAC on the market for the low price of €10.

Comment by Rohansi 1 day ago

> HDMI CEC works pretty decent these days, all the kinks have been worked out over the years and the only time it bugs out is if you use Chinese brands

I don't know. I have an LG TV and it does not support turning the display on/off with HDMI CEC. Everything else seems to work but it intentionally ignores those commands.

Comment by tim-- 1 day ago

Have you turned off SIMPLINK? (LG's older name for CEC).

Option 1 (Hidden Menu Method)

* Press the Mute button repeatedly until the hidden menu appears; ensure Auto Power Sync is enabled.

* Go to General → Devices → TV Management and disable Quick Start+.

* Go to General → System → Additional Settings → Home Settings and turn off both options.

Option 2 (Settings Menu Method, webOS)

* Press Settings on the remote and open All Settings.

* Navigate to General → Devices.

* Turn SIMPLINK (HDMI-CEC) ON. (webOS 6.0+, enabling SIMPLINK automatically enables external device control).

Comment by Rohansi 1 day ago

No, it is enabled. Other CEC commands like changing the active input work.

Comment by jorvi 1 day ago

[Older] LG TVs do not implement CEC Standby command. You need a hardware mod: https://github.com/Pulse-Eight/libcec/issues/363#issuecommen...

Comment by Rohansi 1 day ago

That's too bad. It's only about five years old now. Old but not unreasonably old.

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by TheAmazingRace 1 day ago

Funny enough... HDMI CEC is still not perfect in my experience. For the longest time, if I powered on my Mac mini and not power on the TV manually, it would actually cause the TV to crash and force a reboot. It was really strange behavior.

Comment by VerifiedReports 1 day ago

Is there any reason CEC can't be implemented over DisplayPort?

Comment by crote 1 day ago

There shouldn't be. DP already is a half-duplex, bidirectional AUX channel running at 1 Mbps.

Comment by omcnoe 1 day ago

Brightness control on external monitors has never been supported in Windows though, partially due to issues with displays that have poor write endurance on internal storage.

Comment by user_7832 1 day ago

It might not be an "internal windows" tool, but I have controlled an ancient monitor (I think over VGA?) using a 3rd part app on windows. The buttons had broken, but software control worked just fine.

Comment by tylerflick 1 day ago

Monitor brightness is controlled over CEC which is just i2c. Windows most certainly supports this on an OS level.

Comment by fainpul 1 day ago

Comment by poolnoodle 1 day ago

I change brightness all the time with a little tool called Monitorian.

Comment by metadat 1 day ago

As long as you are okay with a 1-3m long cable.

Unfortunately, for longer runs, DisplayPort is kind of a nightmare. HDMI tends to "just work" as long as you use fiber optic construction.

Comment by PunchyHamster 1 day ago

nothing stops cable makers from making the same for DP

Comment by brirec 1 day ago

In fact I’ve used a 100 foot fiber optic DisplayPort cable that I “just bought” on Amazon, admittedly for a LOT of money (like, I think it was about $100 USD, 3 years ago or so).

Comment by crote 1 day ago

I just wish they sold the transceivers separately from the fiber. Being able to use any random length of cheap off-the-shelf SMF/MMF fiber would be so much more convenient than having to get a custom one-off cable.

They exist for medium-speed HDMI (see for example [0]), but I haven't seen them for modern high-speed DP yet.

https://www.amazon.com/Converter-Extender-Transceiver-module...

Comment by metadat 1 day ago

That's not actually such a bad price. I didn't know they even made these - cool!

Comment by BlueTemplar 1 day ago

You say it's a LOT, but it's about the same cost as a much much shorter USB 4.0 cable. (Granted, it also has to be able to carry 240W.)

Comment by jauntywundrkind 1 day ago

Huh, I thought I had mine earlier. Mine was from May 2021. They were very very new and had very few reviews, and it was $56. For a 100' fiber optic cable that promised 8k60 and was light.

This cable is absurdly long. I have no idea how to coil it nicely. At my last place I had three stories, and would sometimes just dangle most of it down to the ground then wind it up from the roof.

Comment by ralferoo 1 day ago

I hate noise from the PC, so I've sited my PC under the desk at the opposite end of the room to where I sit (so about 3.5m away). I have a pair of 5m DP cables running to my 2 ultrawide monitors without any problems at all, so it seems if you buy decent cables it just works with DP too.

The only potential issue is that they seem to be slow waking up from sleep. I've never been interested enough to investigate if moving the PC closer with shorter cables fixes that, or whether it's just an issue with having 2 monitors. I think the underlying cause is actually just because it's Windows and that one monitor (they're supposed to be identical) seems to wake up earlier than the other, so it briefly flashes on, then goes black while it reconfigures for 2 screens and then on again.

But anyway, my 5m cable runs seem fine. They weren't especially expensive nor especially cheap cables, IIRC around 10-15 GBP each.

Comment by nubinetwork 1 day ago

TFA says that AMD has a working 2.1 driver, but the hdmi forum goons rejected it.

Comment by summermusic 1 day ago

Maybe one day I can pirate an HDMI driver

Comment by machomaster 1 day ago

You wouldn't pirate a car, why would you pirate a driver!

Comment by aleph_minus_one 1 day ago

> You wouldn't pirate a car, why would you pirate a driver!

I wouldn't steal a car, but I would copy one or download one from the internet and 3D-print it.

Comment by Grisu_FTP 1 day ago

Yea, IMO piracy is a misnomer. To steal something (or Pirate) you would have to take something which causes the original to disappear from the owner.

But Piracy isnt that, you create an unlawful copy, but you didnt steal (IMO)

Which is why i cant participate in the "Is AdBlocker Piracy" debate, because for me, not even piracy is piracy :P

Comment by nicman23 1 day ago

one day you wont have to

Comment by throwawayfour 1 day ago

If they have a working driver since 2 years ago, couldn't they just release it to the community? I imagine most gamers would typically be capable/ok with that.

Comment by some-guy 1 day ago

Are they rejecting the driver because of it being open source? There are specific modules I use in my AMD card that require closed proprietary driver add-ons for example such as AMF.

Not defending the HDMI forum here, but perhaps Valve / AMD have a way of including a proprietary blob in SteamOS (I don't think most gamers would care)

Comment by Groxx 1 day ago

>Valve strictly adheres to open-source drivers, but the HDMI Forum is unwilling to disclose the 2.1 specification.

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Comment by ginko 1 day ago

So just drop off a patch somewhere by "accident" and have someone else merge it. What are they gonna do?

Comment by petepete 1 day ago

I'd rather buy a 65-75" computer monitor and put it in my living room.

I just don't care about the other things in a TV - I don't want smarts, I don't want speakers, I no longer need a tuner.

Comment by Alupis 1 day ago

The pixel density, among other things, are very different between a TV and a Monitor. This is why a monitor of similar size will be vastly more expensive than a TV - they're optimized for different viewing experiences/use-cases.

For a simple example, a TV usually assumes the viewer isn't sitting just inches away from it...

Comment by kakacik 22 hours ago

There are differences but man you for sure picked the most incorrect one - 4K say 42" OLED TV and same dimension PC gaming screen have exactly same pixel density, there is no subspace magic.

Comment by petepete 4 hours ago

I have a 4k 42" OLED Phillips Evnia monitor on my desk.

If they sold a 4k 65-75" version of it, I'd buy it in a flash.

https://www.philips.co.uk/c-p/42M2N8900_00/evnia-gaming-moni...

Comment by bootsmann 1 day ago

Isn't HDMI held by TV manufacturers who are looking to make some extra bucks on the side getting a utility from cables/monitors/GPUs? I don't think they would intentionally nuke this revenue stream.

Comment by ragebol 1 day ago

I'm not a gamer, so honest question: what is PITA with HDMI for gamers?

Comment by fossilwater 1 day ago

Before HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort already supports high refresh rates (greater than 120Hz) at high resolutions. Also many high-end PC graphics cards offer more DisplayPort ports than HDMI.

Comment by NekkoDroid 22 hours ago

I think most graphics cards nowadays come with roughtly 3 DP ports and 1 HDMI port. It might be different for things like the Multi-media cards that are on the low-low end of the spectrum (think of GT 730 level in a generation) might have more HDMI ports since they are more intended for such an audience.

Comment by sounds 1 day ago

I'm switching to DisplayPort

Comment by jauntywundrkind 1 day ago

That HDMI Forum does not allow TVs to be sold with DisplayPort is a massive reason I think they deserve to have their building surrounded by angry people with pitchforks and torches. Anti-competitive abusers, doing awful things to prevent a better world.

DisplayPort actually makes sense as a digital protocol, where-as HDMI inherits all the insane baggage of the analog past & just sucks. HDMI is so awful.

Comment by bobdvb 1 day ago

No, they don't put DP on because every $ of hardware they fit to the TV needs to provide value. DP requires a large board component that may need manual handling, circuit traces (+ decoupling) and silicon on the chip to interface. It then requires software support in the stack and that needs testing/validation.

The percentage of people who will actually use DP to connect their TV vs HDMI is tiny. Even people who do have DisplayPort on their monitors will often times connect it with HDMI just because it's the more familiar connector. I spent a decade working in that area and we literally were debating about spending cents on devices that retailed for hundreds, or thousands. The secondary problem that drives that is that ~90% of TVs sold use the same family of chips from MStar, so even if you wanted to go off-track and make something special, you can only do it from off-the-shelf silicon unless you pay a fortune for your own spin of the silicon. If you want to do that then you better commit to buying >1m chips or they won't get out of bed.

HDMI forum was founded by mostly TV manufacturers, they're not interested in constraining the market in that way. It's all just been market consolidation and making TVs cheaper through tighter integration.

Comment by noname120 1 day ago

> That HDMI Forum does not allow TVs to be sold with DisplayPort

Wait what?! This would be jaw-dropping anticompetitive behavior. Could you source this statement?

Comment by somat 1 day ago

Oh wow, that explains a lot, I sort of always figured it was just market momentum that meant you never see tv's with a display port. sort of like

... we need a digital video link

VESA develops DVI

... market gap for tv's identified

hdmif develops HDMI which is DVI with an audio channel

... while technically a minor feature that audio link was the killer feature for digital tv's and led to hdmi being the popular choice for tv's

VESA develops displayport a packet(vs streaming for DVI and hdmi) based digital link, it's packet nature allows for several interesting features including sending audio, and multiple screens.

... no tv's use it, while display port is better than hdmi it is not better enough to make a difference to the end user and so hdmi remains normal for tv's, you can find a few computer monitor with DP but you have to seek them out.

I will have to see if there is some sort of stupid "additional licensing cost" if a tv is produced with displayport, that would explain so much. I don't claim that there are no tv's with DP but I certainly have never seen one.

Comment by KingLancelot 1 day ago

[dead]

Comment by ivolimmen 1 day ago

Well HDMI is better than all the standards I used before it. Never did something with DisplayPort but for what I can tell it's Apple related (right?). I used DVI-I, DVI-D, VGA, and even old stuff in the past.

Comment by somat 1 day ago

There is the vesa standards organization with a pretty good history of successful display connections standards vga(analog video) dvi(digital video) and displayport(packet video) and very little drama affecting the end user with how the connection is used.

Contrast this with the hdmi consortium which put together the hdmi standard. originally hdmi was just dvi with a built in audio channel. and while I will concede that the audio channel was a killer feature and resulted in the huge success of hdmi. They really did very little technical work and what work they did do was end user hostile (hdcp rights management)

It really is too bad that display-port is sort of relegated to computer monitors as it is better designed and less end user hostile than hdmi. but hdmi with it's built in audio channel won the market for digital video connections and by the time display port was out people were, understandably, reluctant to switch again. While display port is better, it is not enough better to be for the end user to care.

Comment by kakacik 22 hours ago

Have you even bothered reading any discussion here? I can't downvote you but its easy to see why others did so, a very lazy and clueless comment about very basic of tech everybody uses, on Hacker news. You can for sure do better.

Comment by evolve2k 1 day ago

Here’s their social media presence if anyone is feeling like they’d like to drop them a message:

https://www.facebook.com/HDMIForum/

https://twitter.com/HDMIForum/

https://www.instagram.com/hdmiforum/

https://www.linkedin.com/groups/8553802

Comment by anonymars 1 day ago

I assume I'm not the only one with a true WTF reaction to "HDMI has a facebook and an instagram?"

(I was quite a bit less surprised that there was no real content in them)

Comment by jasomill 1 day ago

No, but now that you mention it, I'm curious about the five posts to the official US Federal Bureau of Prisons Instagram[1], which, unlike their Facebook and Twitter accounts, is private.

(No relation, just the first thing that came to mind when I tried to think of an organization that I wouldn't expect to have much of a social media presence.)

[1] https://www.instagram.com/bureauofprisons/

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Comment by tclancy 1 day ago

Am I understanding correctly that the underlying issue is asking exorbitant prices to see the HDMI Forum’s specs? Feels like you shouldn’t be able to define an industry spec if you want to get paid for it, but maybe that would suppress smaller-scale, niche development.

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

No, the issue here is that the HDMI 2.1 NDA is so strict that releasing an open source implementation is forbidden no matter how much you pay them. AMD has access to the specs, they've implemented it in hardware and in their closed source Windows driver, but they're not allowed to add it to their open source Linux driver.

Nvidia does support HDMI 2.1 on Linux since their driver is closed source (but that causes its own problems). Maybe AMD could compromise by releasing a minimal binary blob which only exposes the HDMI 2.1 implementation and nothing else.

Comment by robhlt 1 day ago

Nvidia's kernel driver is open source now [1], they just do the important HDMI bits in their closed source GSP firmware. Basically they moved the proprietary stuff to firmware and open sourced the rest. AMD could do something similar, but it would require a hardware change on their side (the GSP was a new bit of hardware added in Turing Nvidia GPUs).

1. https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules

Comment by SahAssar 1 day ago

> Basically they moved the proprietary stuff to firmware and open sourced the rest

I'm pretty sure they also moved a lot of stuff to a closed source user-space component, right?

This quote from that readme also seems to indicate a required user-space component that I'm pretty sure is not open sourced?

> Note that the kernel modules built here must be used with GSP firmware and user-space NVIDIA GPU driver components from a corresponding 590.44.01 driver release

Comment by robhlt 1 day ago

The closed-source user-space component isn't new, the drivers always contained a kernel module and user-space libraries. Those libraries provide an OpenGL and Vulkan implementation. It's equivalent to Mesa for AMD and Intel GPUs (and the kernel driver is equivalent to amdgpu and i915 respectively).

Since it's closed we can't really know for sure if anything was moved to it from the kernel, but I think it's quite unlikely something like HDMI link setup was moved to user-space instead of to firmware.

Comment by gavinsyancey 1 day ago

And IIRC Intel has handled this by making their cards internally use DisplayPort then putting DisplayPort -> HDMI converters on the board.

Comment by protimewaster 1 day ago

HDMI Forum: Working hard to ensure HDMI isn't your first choice

Comment by ronsor 1 day ago

What if a third-party reverse engineers the specifications and releases an open driver, regardless of what the HDMI Forum wishes?

Comment by pipo234 1 day ago

I suppose you could do a clean room reimplantation, but I doubt you could advertise it as HDMI 2.1 compliant without legal repercussions.

Comment by stronglikedan 1 day ago

That's why you advertise it as HDMI 2.1 compatible instead. I believe there's precedence that allows that.

Comment by jorvi 1 day ago

It most likely would prevent you from playing anything HDCP. HDCP is illegal (?) to reverse engineer, and there are special versions of HDCP2 specifically for HDMI. You need a license and a verified device for HDCP.

That might not matter much for an ordinary PC, but this Steam Machine will be competing for the living room with the PS5 and Xbox which have Netflix, Disney, HBO, etc; Not sure if things like Spotify are HDCP-protected.

It will be interesting to see how Valve works out the kinks for that. Honestly in general it'll be interesting, because putting those things on Steam Store basically turns Steam Store into a general software store instead of a game store. And the only cross-platform store at that.

With iOS and Android being broken open, you could have games be completely cross-licensed. I'd say other software too, but sadly with everything going the subscription model, you usually already have cross-licensing, in the form of an account.

Comment by ruined 15 hours ago

it's removing HDCP protection that's problematic, not adding HDCP protection

looking at the available information on HDCP, it looks like the transmitter does not have to be authenticated - they use the receiver's pubkey, much like a web browser transmits to an HTTPS server

Comment by kalleboo 1 day ago

How does HDCP work over DisplayPort? I guess HDCP is a different spec from HDMI itself?

Comment by Dagonfly 1 day ago

Yes, HDCP is seperate from HDMI and DP.

The source and the sink need a HDCP-licence. Both devices have embbed keys that get exchanged to estabish a encrypted channel. Without the licence you can't get the required key material.

AFAIK, you can even sell HDMI devices without HDCP. Practically though, every entertainment device needs HDCP support.

Comment by estimator7292 1 day ago

Part of what you're paying for is the right to use the trademarked tern HDMI, just like how the USB Consortium charges you stupid money to use the USB logo.

The suit over usage of "HDMI" in a reverse engineered version would wind up arguing whether or not HDMI is a genericised term and the HDMI Forum would lose their trademark. They will throw every cent they have into preventing such a decision and it'll get ugly

Comment by AnthonyMouse 1 day ago

Can't you use a trademark to refer to the thing as long as it's clear you're not claiming to be them? Like if you say your PC is "IBM compatible" you're not claiming to be IBM, are you?

Comment by pipo234 1 day ago

Yes, that might work. Strictly, HDMI is a registered trademark that might have strings but you could always say something like EIA/CEA-861... compatible instead

Comment by PunchyHamster 1 day ago

it's compliant with Valve Digital Media Interface. The fact signalling is same as for 2.1 HDMI is pure accident

Comment by adgjlsfhk1 1 day ago

trademark doesn't cover descriptive language. saying it is an HDMI port is trademarked. Saying it is compatible with HDMI cables and displays is a purely descriptive statement.

Comment by ssl-3 1 day ago

It's called nominative use, and describing a thing as "HDMI compatible" is permitted.

One doesn't get to use the logo or even the typeface, but that's not a dealbreaker at all for the purposes being discussed here. Words themselves are OK (and initialisms, such as "HDMI," are just a subset of words like nouns and verbs are).

The wiki has some background: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominative_use

Comment by tadfisher 1 day ago

HDMI is patent-encumbered. The original specification has lost patent protection, but VRR and the other bits which form HDMI 2.1 and 2.2 are still protected as part of the Forum's patent pool. You could certainly try and upstream an infringing implementation into the kernel, but no one would be able to distribute it in their products without a license.

Comment by ronsor 1 day ago

> no one would be able to distribute it in their products without a license.

In some jurisdictions, yes; however, some would probably still distribute it anyway, on purpose or not. I doubt all of them would get sued either, since lawsuits are expensive and difficult.

From my perspective, the objective is to make enforcement impractical.

Comment by AnthonyMouse 1 day ago

> You could certainly try and upstream an infringing implementation into the kernel, but no one would be able to distribute it in their products without a license.

Isn't that actually a pretty good workaround? Hardware vendor pays for the license, implements the standard, sells the hardware. Linux kernel has a compatible implementation, relying on the first sale doctrine to use the patent license that came with the hardware, and then you could run it on any hardware that has the port (and thereby the license). What's the problem?

Comment by tadfisher 1 day ago

> relying on the first sale doctrine to use the patent license that came with the hardware

First-sale doctrine protects against copyright or trademark infringement. You might be thinking of "patent exhaustion"[1], which is a mostly US-specific court doctrine that prevents patent holders from enforcing license terms against eventual purchasers of the patented invention. There is no "transitive law of patent licensing", so-to-speak.

In this case, it would still not protect Valve if they exercise each claim in the relevant patents by including both hardware and an unlicensed implementation of the software process. It would protect end users who purchased the licensed hardware and chose to independently install drivers which are not covered by the license.

It's murky if Valve would infringe by some DeCSS-like scheme whereby they direct users to install a third-party HDMI 2.1 driver implementation on first boot, but I don't think they would risk their existing HDMI license by doing so.

1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exhaustion_doctrine_under_U.S....

Comment by pdimitar 1 day ago

What would the legal repercussions be against an anonymous coder who donated the code to multiple code forges? Action against the code forges themselves? I mean, not like they would be able to find the guy.

Comment by u8080 1 day ago

I saw chinese hw companies use "HDTV" or "HD" to avoid HDMI trademark usage.

Comment by orthoxerox 1 day ago

Yep, and "HDML" on one device that would obey its user and strip HDCP from the stream when asked.

Comment by ThatPlayer 1 day ago

I've seen a few devices not advertising HDMI at all. Just calling it a generic "Digital Video" output.

Comment by littlestymaar 1 day ago

On what basis? Trademark infringement?

Comment by pipo234 1 day ago

Yes, that. I think you're only allowed to claim support/compliance if you're certified. And that, allegedly, means they run a couple of closed source tests and involves paperwork and NDAs.

Comment by MBCook 1 day ago

It wouldn’t be HDMI 2.1 because it couldn’t be certified. And if you claimed it was 2.1 I imagine they would sue you.

Could it actually be made? I kind of wonder that. Like if one of the things you have to do is claim to the other device that you’re 2.1 would that get you in trouble? Or if you just advertise all the features and they each work is that good enough?

Comment by tedivm 1 day ago

They could just say "we believe we're compliant with HDMI 2.1 but are not officially certified". No lies, no claims they can't make, and nothing I can see that would introduce legal risk to folks unless there's some patent encumbered garbage in the spec.

Comment by MBCook 1 day ago

Right. I would just advertise the features not the version number.

My only concern there is the protocol stuff I mentioned.

Comment by bluGill 1 day ago

generally if something is needed for interoperability the courts only accept patents as a way to protected it (patents have a limited lifespan). However the law gets really complex and you need a lawyer for legal advice.

Comment by baby_souffle 1 day ago

I think in this case you still couldn't claim it was certified. It would be on users to discover that if they plug an HDMI capable screen into that HDMI shaped port on your widget device, things just work and video shows up as expected

Comment by bluGill 1 day ago

Note that if the protocol itself only works if the device claims certification you may be able to claim certification in the protocol. However you couldn't claim certification in marketing or any other context except where things wouldn't work if you were not certified.

Comment by hidroto 1 day ago

> Like if one of the things you have to do is claim to the other device that you’re 2.1 would that get you in trouble?

nintendo tried that with the gameboy. games had to have a copy of the nintendo logo in them. i dont think it was ever tested in court though.

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Comment by asadm 1 day ago

yeah I am curious too. Could I legally just reverse engineer that binary and re-implement it?

Comment by nradov 1 day ago

In general to avoid IP legal problems in the USA you can't do all of that yourself. Generally one party has to do all of the reverse engineering and write a specification based on that. Then another party can take that specification and write a "clean room" implementation.

https://www.allaboutcircuits.com/news/how-compaqs-clone-comp...

Comment by charcircuit 1 day ago

Are there examples where a single person doing it gets successfully sued? It could just be that those companies were extra risk adverse so they came up with monetarily inefficient ways to defend themselves.

Comment by AnthonyMouse 1 day ago

It's sort of the other side of that coin. There was a case where a company did it like this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean-room_design

The courts said that was fine, and whenever that happens, lawyers are going to tell people to do it exactly like that since it's a known-good way to do it, whereas some other way is maybe and who wants a maybe if you have the option to lockstep the process that was previously approved?

Of course, if you do it a different way and then that gets approved, things change. But only after somebody actually goes to court over it, which generally nobody enjoys, not least because the outcome is uncertain.

Comment by charcircuit 1 day ago

Sure, but "can't" is a strong thing to say, when actually the result is thought to be legally untested.

Comment by AnthonyMouse 13 hours ago

You have to understand where "can't" comes from. It's a multi-layered system. If the government says you can do it one way and then the corporation's lawyers tell them to do it that way, corporate policy then becomes that you have to do it that way, and you therefore "can't" do it some other way.

This is why government regulations often create perverse incentives and unintended consequences. You can't just consider what the rule says, you have to consider how people are going to respond to it.

This is why e.g. the DMCA takedown process is widely abused. Do corporations have to execute obviously invalid takedown requests? Maybe not. Are most of them going to, when the consequence of doing it is harm to powerless third party individuals and the consequence of not doing it is potential liability for the corporation? Yup.

Comment by ctoth 1 day ago

I've been thinking about this recently. What if one of the parties is an LLM?

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

Who knows, someone will have to get dragged into court to set that precedent one way or the other.

Comment by drdaeman 1 day ago

I think we’re waiting for the courts to deem LLMs able to sidestep any copyright and contract laws. If they do, artists and writers may be pissed, but engineers are gonna be lit (as long as they hate current status quo of nothing being interoperable)

Comment by realo 1 day ago

So... I ask Gemini to write a technical spec and Claude Code to implement it?

Basically a week-end project...

Comment by EvanAnderson 1 day ago

The typical "clean room" process would be to have one group reverse-engineer the original and document it, then have another group of "un-tainted" people implement the spec.

This methodology has been shown to be an effective shield against copyright infringement, but it does not protect you from patent infringement. Presumably the spec is patent-encumbered specifically to prevent this type of "attack".

You also wouldn't have any rights to use any HDMI-related trademarks.

Comment by Teever 1 day ago

Everything old is new again. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeCSS

It worked out pretty okay for DVD Jon but I imagine it was a little scary for his dad and brother at the time.

Comment by orthoxerox 1 day ago

I used to remember the lyrics to the 09 F9 song.

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Comment by calgoo 1 day ago

Sounds like a good job for all that AI power that is being used for BS. I wonder if we could all crowd source a driver, 100s of claude and google gemini subscriptions working towards breaking the standard and releasing 100s of different implementations that does the same.

Comment by therein 1 day ago

Yeah right, 100s of Claude and Gemini subscriptions towards breaking the standard... That's how things are done. Not just one guy with a good reverse engineering skillset.

What if you crowd sourced not 100s but 1000s of Claude subscriptions. That's where the power is. You just give them a task and they just finish it for you. That's how things are done now.

Hard problem? Throw 50000s Claude subscriptions and it will kneel in front of you. Unstoppable. 50000s Claude subscriptions not enough, throw 10000000 subscriptions at it and problem solved. That's how it all works, we know this is the way to do things. Everybody knows you take a problem and throw more Claudes at it and that's it.

For example, we can do anything we want, we just need more Claude subscriptions. I couldn't do something the other day, the problem is I didn't have enough Claudes.

We just need an order of magnitude more Claude subscriptions to figure out cold fusion and unify general relativity with quantum interpretation of the world. Can you imagine what 10E10 Claude subscriptions would do with that problem? Problem stands no chance.

It is so annoying people think this is future, that this is analysis. Despicable.

Comment by charcircuit 1 day ago

I think you misread the comment. Each person's AI agent breaks the standard once. He was not claiming they would work together. And even if he the act of translating and understanding large sums of text (binary data) seems easier to divide and concor than open ended problems like cold fusion or unifying quantum physics and general relativity.

Comment by Ayesh 1 day ago

I know that HN replies must carry some substance, unlike majority of Reddit comments. But I wanted to say that this comment read line a poem to me.

Comment by conartist6 1 day ago

Wow, full on delusional about how engineering work scales. Can't save everyone from themselves...

Comment by anthk 1 day ago

What would you expect from z'ers growing up under closed magical shells doing everything for themselves (smartphone and tablet OSes) and later being utterly lost with the basics of IT.

Comment by cubefox 1 day ago

Great, now my face hurts from laughing.

Comment by cedws 1 day ago

Why on earth is a connector standard secret?

Comment by clhodapp 1 day ago

It's not the connector, it's the communication protocol.

It's super lame though. It will be great to watch the downfall of HDMI Forum when their artificial dam against DisplayPort in the living room finally breaks.

Comment by bee_rider 1 day ago

What is the dam against DisplayPort anyway? I never see it on TVs for whatever reason.

Actually it’s a bit odd, in my mind DisplayPort is highly associated with quality. But I don’t actually know if it is the superior connector or if it just seems that way because monitors are usually better than TVs in every metric other than size and brightness.

Comment by clhodapp 1 day ago

HDMI Forum don't like TV SOC boards that have both kinds of ports and discourage them from being made.

Also, HDMI Forum don't like converter boards that support every advanced feature at once (Variable Refresh Rate, HDR, etc.) and won't license them.

DisplayPort and HDMI kind of leapfrog each other in terms of technical superiority, so neither is definitively technically superior in the long term.

Comment by danudey 1 day ago

Mass-market compatibility.

It's already difficult to find TVs with four fully-compliant HDMI ports; often you'll get a TV with one HDMI 2.1 port and three HDMI 2.0 ports, and sometimes the 2.1 port will also be the only eARC port so you have to choose between high framerates/resolutions and using a sound bar. In other words, even with just HDMI getting a decent set of ports is difficult.

The idea of TV manufacturers also adding DisplayPort ports seems ludicrous to me - not because it's a bad idea, but because I can't imagine them going to the trouble if there's no tangible demand. At best I could see them replacing HDMI ports with DP ports because there's limited space on the motherboard, but that would still require the board to have both HDMI and DP circuitry/chipsets and HDMI/DP certification/testing.

Then you have a TV with, say, two HDMI ports and two DP ports - which, for most users, means "two ports" since 99% of people don't have any hardware they want to connect to their TV that supports DP anyway.

So basically unless we start seeing game consoles, AppleTVs, and Rokus supporting DisplayPort we won't see TVs supporting DisplayPort, and we won't see any of those devices supporting DP because they don't need to - HDMI works fine for them and it's sufficiently universal.

Maybe China's new HDMI replacement will take off over there and make its way into devices over here, but I'm not holding out hope.

Comment by klausa 1 day ago

My understanding is that the HDMI 2.1 port situation on TVs is, weirdly enough, a SoC limitation from a single vendor.

Almost everyone (apart from... Samsung and LG, IIRC) is using MediaTek SoC for the brains for the TVs, and they just seem to be unable to make one that has enough bandwidth for 4xHDMI 2.1.

AFAIK LG and Samsung still handle theirs in-house (and that's why LG was the very first "big" vendor to ship 2.1 at all, and they rolled it out to all four ports even on their midrange TV's in _2019_!); and it's common to see those brands have more 2.1 ports.

This should be getting better in 2025/2026 model years, since it seems MediaTek has finally managed to ship a SoC that does it; but it's ridiculous how long it's taken.

Comment by clhodapp 1 day ago

China's new HDMI replacement currently has no known benefit over HDMI in terms of protocol governance issues.

Comment by danudey 10 hours ago

You're right. I should have said 'maybe China's new HDMI replacement will be managed better and take off'.

Comment by xattt 1 day ago

Apparently, the Hisense U8QG has DP-over-USB-C support. This might be the Trojan horse for DP in the living room.

Comment by klausa 1 day ago

The supported version of DisplayPort in that TV is on par (-ish) with HDMI 2.0; and not enough for HDR 4k120; which is one of the selling points of HDMI2.1.

Comment by preisschild 1 day ago

Many TV manufacturers are part of the HDMI forum...

https://hdmiforum.org/members/

Comment by jasomill 1 day ago

Here's a stupid question: per the site, "any entity wishing to make an active and material contribution to the development of future HDMI Specifications" can join the HDMI Forum for $15,000 p.a., and the Board of Directors is elected by majority vote by members.

Is there anything other than the money and desire to do so stopping 100 well-heeled Linux users from joining up and packing the board with open source-friendly directors who would as their first official act grant AMD permission to release its driver?

Comment by WhyNotHugo 1 day ago

This sounds like what microsoft did to get their Office formats standardised by ISO. Paid membership to a bunch of folk and had the vote in favour of approving the standard. (I'm summarising *a lot*, but that's the general gist of it).

Comment by bombcar 1 day ago

You’d want to submarine it because the forum could change its rules in “defense”.

But yes, it wouldn’t be much to do.

Comment by wtetzner 1 day ago

Sounds like a conflict of interest

Comment by fullstop 1 day ago

DRM, I believe

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

I don't think so, DisplayPort incorporates the same HDCP encryption standard that HDMI uses.

Comment by fullstop 1 day ago

edit: the source that I found was incorrect, and this statement is false.

DRM is optional with DisplayPort but mandatory with HDMI.

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

Did that change in a more recent version? According to the (admittedly old) source linked from the Wikipedia article, integrators are allowed to skip HDCP but incentivized with reduced royalties if they do support it.

https://web.archive.org/web/20081218170701/http://www.hdmi.o...

> For each end-user Licensed Product, fifteen cents (US$0.15) per unit sold.

> If the Adopter reasonably uses the HDMI logo on the product and promotional materials, then the rate drops to five cents (US$0.05) per unit sold.

> If the Adopter implements HDCP content protection as set forth in the HDMI Specification, then the royalty rate is further reduced by one cent (US$0.01) per unit sold, for a lowest rate of four cents (US$0.04) per unit.

Comment by fullstop 1 day ago

You're right, the source that I found was incorrect.

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

> It's not the connector, it's the communication protocol

In particular the link training procedures needed to reliably push 48 Gbit/s over copper are probably very non-trivial, and could be considered "secret sauce".

Comment by mschuster91 1 day ago

That's done by the PHY layer, there's no need to implement that in software.

Comment by throawayonthe 1 day ago

tbh it'll probably be GPMI, not DisplayPort

Comment by clhodapp 1 day ago

GPMI isn't an open standard and it doesn't support HDCP. It might end up being very popular in China but it will be a hard sell in markets that aren't primarily consuming Chinese media.

Comment by MBCook 1 day ago

Why would display port ever start taking over in the living room?

Comment by clhodapp 1 day ago

It's cheaper to implement than HDMI. So if DisplayPort ports are common on displays, devices will start using it (cheapo devices first). If DisplayPort ports are common on devices, displays won't need HDMI anymore. Plus, industry-wide, it's wildly inefficient to have one high-bandwidth video connector for monitors and a different one for TV's when the technical distinction between those is pretty much non-existent and we could scale our engineering effort across a much wider set of devices.

So, after a transition period, cost-saving will eventually lead to DisplayPort taking over.

Comment by mschuster91 1 day ago

> when the technical distinction between those is pretty much non-existent

I think CEC support is still spotty and ARC (audio return channel) isn't supported at all in DP.

Comment by 0x457 1 day ago

Well, CEC is a huge mess and barely works[1]. You're right on ARC and eARC. I'd rather DP had a better version of both, but that wouldn't happen.

[1]: If you have a stack that works, I'm happy for you, but trust you're just lucky to have a working combination.

Comment by bluGill 1 day ago

Because the manufactures don't have to pay a license fee and so once someone start using it everyone will follow and then drop hdmi. However so far nobody has cared enough to be first.

Comment by Clamchop 1 day ago

USB C is at least one reason that will apply constant pressure.

Comment by deathanatos 1 day ago

Well, if this were a free market, b/c there would be demand for it? I want a more standardized protocol so I need less cabling and connectors, and I want features like 4k that HDMI effectively (see TFA) does not support.

I would vote with my wallet … if I could.

Like, why do we need two connectors, for the same thing? DP is clearly technically superior.

Of course, there's a wide range of issues: there's a number of comments on this article stating how the HDMI forum is manipulating the market (e.g., by suppressing competitor connectors on the board, offering lower royalties for bugs, suppressing specifications), and then there's just getting out-competed by the litany of consumers who have no idea and do not care to know what they are buying, and marketplaces like Amazon that promote mystery-meat wares.

Comment by TheChaplain 1 day ago

How else will you charge people from implementing support for it?

Comment by pipo234 1 day ago

Well, in video land there is patent pools. For example, you pay nominal fee to download specs from iso/ice 14496-12 to learn the details about BMFF and then pay mpeg-la a couple of dollars per device of it uses an AVC / h264 decoder.

These are open standards, but mpeg-la tries to recoup some of the research costs from "freeloaders".

Open source implementations like ffmpeg are a bit of a grey area,here

Comment by stephen_g 1 day ago

For now at least - for H.264 AVC, the patents are expired in most countries and most of the final US patents that may apply to AVC High profile will expire in the first half of 2026 [1].

Except in Brazil, where there are even MPEG-4 patents still in effect (expiring later in 2026) and the H.264 patents will last until the early 2030s, I think because of a rule that gave 10 years extra but is now changed but not retrospective for these patents [2].

1. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Have_the_patents_for_H.264_M...

2. https://intellectual-property-helpdesk.ec.europa.eu/news-eve...

Comment by littlestymaar 1 day ago

That's obviously less bad, but let's not pretend this is great either.

Comment by pipo234 1 day ago

Yes, not great indeed. This is why we have av1, ogg, etc. with most of the hard research re-done just to sidestep those pesky patents.

Comment by 0x457 1 day ago

We also have a secret json schema for Dolby Vision, idk why are you surprised. This talk is about protocol, but the connector.

Comment by zoeysmithe 1 day ago

Why not? Its not an open standard. This is the rent-seeking behavior you get under for-profit capitalist implementations. This is why we push so hard for open standards.

Comment by 0l 1 day ago

Uh, the HDMI forum is non-profit

Comment by crote 1 day ago

That's meaningless, because they delegated licensing to HDMI® Licensing Administrator, Inc. And even if they are somehow a nonprofit: you are also not making any profit when all the money you retrieve via licensing fees is used to pay the royalties of the various patent holders.

Nobody cares if the mailing list where they discuss the upcoming specs is managed by a non-profit, the broader HDMI ecosystem is still a massive money grab.

Comment by interstice 1 day ago

Then why do they have all this?

Comment by zoeysmithe 1 day ago

Profit/non-profit isn't a big difference. Many non-profits are essentially businesses in practice (money spent/managed, the non-profit just a conduit to the for-profit companies that defacto own it), but just don't issue stock. A non-profit can act like this, and DOES. Non-profits exist in a capitalist context and inherit those norms. Again, this is why we aim for open standards.

Also a non-profit is just that, its not a charity. A charity is an entirely other classification and even those are regularly used and abused like this.

Comment by bluGill 1 day ago

There is more than stock required to be non-profit. I suspect technically a non-profit could issue stock, though it is probably not something any would ever try.

Non-profit is a business arrangement where making money isn't the goal. There are many different versions of one though: many local clubs are a non-profit and they exist only for the benefit of their members.

Comment by Aachen 1 day ago

I wonder if the license dictates that you must use a specific language, or if they could ship that proprietary component in Javascript. My understanding is that well-written JS with a JIT runtime can be very close to native performance. Not only would that make fun of the forum's requirements, it would also provide transparency about what the proprietary module does on your system exactly

Comment by thway15269037 1 day ago

And what if they just do it anyway? What are they going to do, sue them? Make them scrub every git repository on the planet?

Comment by bpavuk 1 day ago

it will be easy to prove that it is not technically possible since Git is decentralized. but fines... oh, those fines could be enormous. possibly, AMD could get barred from implementing HDMI at all - all HDMI has to do is to stop selling the spec to AMD specifically.

Comment by progbits 1 day ago

Can't we just leak the spec?

Anyone can then implement opensource driver based on that and distribute it freely, since NDA won't apply to them.

Comment by embedding-shape 1 day ago

Just because something is accessible publicly doesn't mean it's suddenly legal to copy it, same as it isn't OK to go into someone's house just because the door was open. Unless you're police for some weird reasons.

Comment by foxrider 1 day ago

No, for the resulting open drivers to not be legally dubious the spec can only be obtained by doing a clean-room reverse engineering.

Comment by ndriscoll 1 day ago

Legally dubious in what sense? Leaking it might break trade secret protection, but afaik once it's public, it loses that protection, and the only one liable is the leaker. As far as I know, software per se is still not patentable even in the US since the actual source code is abstract mathematics, so it should be fine to publish the source (source code is fundamentally a detailed description of an algorithm, not a system implementing it), and there's effectively no way to stop an end-user from compiling and loading that source themselves. You could also distribute it from a more reasonable country like e.g. VLC does.

Comment by kuon 1 day ago

Well if you can download the source and compile it, I don't think it being legal really matters, just host it in a country that doesn't care.

Comment by teamonkey 1 day ago

The problem isn’t that people don’t know how to do it.

Comment by progbits 1 day ago

So what, just the trademark issue for "hdmi 2.1"?

Call it a imdh driver then, nobody cares as long as it works.

Comment by blensor 1 day ago

Would someone doing a clean room reverse engineering be permissible to then share would they built?

Comment by rf15 1 day ago

Depends on the country; US, probably not. Many european countries, probably yes. Asia? Your gov will ask you why you would bother them with a stupid and meaningless question like that in the first place.

Comment by pseudosavant 1 day ago

The funny thing of course is that the Steam Machine has DisplayPort, and you can easily get a DisplayPort to HDMI 2.1 dongle for $20 retail. But they are targeting this being a console, and those are hooked to TVs over HDMI so it seems lame to not have a built-in HDMI port.

This is mostly an academic exercise though. HDMI 2.0 does 4K @ 60hz, and Valve have 4K @ 120hz (with 4:2:0 chroma subsampling) working over it too. Given the CPU/GPU in this machine, it won't be able to push higher than those limits anyway.

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

The more pertinent issue is that many TVs will only do VRR over HDMI 2.1, and many active DP to HDMI 2.1 adapters won't pass VRR through either.

That's also why the Switch 2 supports VRR on its internal display but not when connected to a TV - the dock can't encode a HDMI 2.1 signal. That's just Nintendo being Nintendo though, they could support it if they wanted to.

Comment by tart-lemonade 1 day ago

Only if the adapter is active; passive ones just tell the GPU to switch protocols to HDMI or whatever, so those are still kneecapped by driver limitations.

Edit: I just checked Amazon and active adapters are a lot cheaper (and less niche) than they used to be, though there are still some annoying results like a passive adapter which has an LED to indicate the connection is "active" being the first result for "DP to HDMI 2.1 active".

Comment by ThatPlayer 1 day ago

For some reason that DisplayPort is only 1.4. That's only ~26 Gigabit/s. While HDMI 2.1 is ~48 Gigabit/s.

You can make up some difference with DSC, but I think that requires the display to support it: dongles won't decode it.

Comment by pxc 1 day ago

Club3D makes some dongles that will convert from DP 1.4 with DSC to HDMI 2.1, actually. The only ones I've used personally are physically USB-C (DP alt mode) on the DP end, though. But they make some that are mDP and have DSC support as well, and they might also have one for full-sized DP, although I bet it requires external power.

Edit: The article claims that a good Club3D adapter for this has disappeared. Yeah, there is an old Club3D adapter (CAC-1085) for this and it's not around anymore (and it does require external power!). But it's been superseded by a newer one (CAC-1088) which is still available on Amazon, at least in the US. (And the new one is bus-powered.)

From the manufacturer: https://www.club-3d.com/shop/cac-1088-1223

on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C4FTWLCJ

Comment by tomovo 1 day ago

I'm guessing the DisplayPort is there to support the original Valve Index directly.

Comment by TitaRusell 1 day ago

I have my high end PC connected to a TV so it ruins my chances of ever switching to Linux. But yes for the Steam box this doesn't matter.

Comment by chazeon 1 day ago

Nvidia's private driver seems to deliver 4k@120Hz just fine.

Comment by xvilka 1 day ago

Just promote DisplayPort and boycott HDMI.

Comment by jacobgkau 1 day ago

That would be easier if both GPU and display manufacturers weren't eschewing newer DisplayPort versions for older versions with DSC (which is not lossless despite its subjective claims of being "visually lossless"), while building in newer HDMI versions with greater performance.

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

To be fair, the DisplayPort 2.0/2.1 standardisation process was riddled with delays and they ended up landing years after HDMI 2.1 did. It stands to reason that hardware manufacturers picked up the earlier spec first.

Comment by AshamedCaptain 1 day ago

what resolution is it that you can drive with "newer HDMI versions" but you cannot drive with DisplayPort 1.4 w/o DSC? The bandwidth difference is not really that much in practice, and "newer HDMI versions" also rely on DSC, or worse, chroma subsampling (objectively and subjectively worse).

I mean, one has been able to drive 5K, 4K@120Hz, etc. for almost over a decade with DP1.4, for the same res you need literally the latest version of HDMI (the "non" TDMS one). It's no wonder that display screens _have_ to use the latest version of HDMI, because otherwise they cannot be driven from a single HDMI port at all.

Having monitors that supported its native resolution through DP but not HDMI used to be a thing until very recently.

Comment by korhojoa 1 day ago

I understand that this is not a common case, but 7680x2160@240 (not to mention using hdr and to be fair, DP 2.1 also requires DSC then).

You can use this to check: https://trychen.com/feature/video-bandwidth

Comment by ThatPlayer 1 day ago

On my computer, I cannot drive my 1440p240hz OLED display with HDR. HDR takes the requirement from 25 Gigabit to 30 Gigabits, just over DP1.4's capabilities: https://linustechtips.com/topic/729232-guide-to-display-cabl...

Like you say, not that much difference, but enough to make DP1.4 not an option

Comment by crapple8430 1 day ago

There are a lot of PC boards where the iGPU only has an HDMI 2.1 output, or with a DP1.4. But DP1.4 doesn't support some of the resolution/refresh combinations that HDMI 2.1 does. Normally this doesn't matter, but it could if you have, for example, the Samsung 57 inch dual 4K ultrawide.

Comment by Albatross9237 1 day ago

I think you'd have bigger issues trying to drive that monitor with an iGPU

Comment by bpye 1 day ago

The iGPU on my 9950X is perfectly capable of driving my Dell U4025QW 5k2k ultrawide. Yeah it would suck for any modern 3D games, but for productivity or light gaming it's fine.

It requires I use the DisplayPort out on Linux because I can't use HDMI 2.1. Because the motherboard has only 1 each of DisplayPort and HDMI this limits my second screen.

Comment by korhojoa 1 day ago

It works fine with intel and amd igpu's. They won't run many games at the native resolution though. Doesn't really matter to me, as the igpu's are in work laptops for me, so 60hz or better passes for "adequate".

Even a raspberry pi 4 or newer has dual 4k outputs, that can fill the entire screen at native resolution. Macs have been the worst to use with it so far.

Comment by crapple8430 1 day ago

I don't have one, but I suppose it would be just fine if you only use it for running a desktop environment.

Comment by devmor 1 day ago

"Just don't support the majority of consumer displays" isn't really an acceptable solution for an organization attempting to be a player in the home entertainment industry.

Comment by dathinab 1 day ago

the problem only affect a subset of HDMI 2.1 features, not HDMI 2.0

but the steam machine isn't really super powerful (fast enough for a lot of games, faster then what a lot of steam customers have, sure. But still no that fast.)

So most of the HDMI 2.1 features it can't use aren't that relevant. Like sure you don't get >60fps@4K but you already need a good amount of FSR to get to 60fps@4k.

Comment by jasomill 1 day ago

Just because the Steam Machine isn't powerful enough to support high framerates in modern AAA games doesn't mean it can't do so with older or less graphically-intensive games.

VRR and HDR are presumably the biggest issues, because HDMI 2.0 should already have enough bandwith to support 8-bit 2160p120 with 4:2:0 chroma subsampling, which should work fine for most SDR games, and 144 Hz vs 120 Hz is, in my experience at least, not noticeably different enough to be worth fussing over.

Some people will want to use their Steam Machine as a general-purpose desktop, of course, where RGB or 4:2:2 is nonnegotiable. Though in this case 120 Hz — or 120,000/1001 Hz, thanks NTSC — is, again in my experience, superior to 144 Hz as it avoids frame pacing issues with 30/60 Hz video.

Comment by bpye 1 day ago

Not supporting VRR is a pretty significant issue.

Comment by aleph_minus_one 1 day ago

> "Just don't support the majority of consumer displays" isn't really an acceptable solution for an organization attempting to be a player in the home entertainment industry.

I would recommend Valve to create an official list of consumer displays that ("certified by Valve") do have proper support for the most recent version of Display Port with support for all features relevant to gaming.

This way gamers know which display to buy next, and display vendors get free advertising for their efforts that is circulated to an audience that is very willing to buy a display in the near future.

Comment by klausa 1 day ago

The complete list of TVs from major brands that do this is very easy to compile; here it is in its entirety:

Comment by WithinReason 1 day ago

Hisense U8QG (over USB-C), no VRR though

Comment by klausa 1 day ago

So neither of the two things that were being asked for.

Comment by xvilka 1 day ago

Definitely a good idea and should improve the end user experience right now as well

Comment by tmtvl 1 day ago

Aren't DP-HDMI adapters good enough for the majority of consumers? On my ancient (2017) PC with integrated graphics I can't tell a difference between the DP out vs the HDMI out.

Comment by onli 1 day ago

The article mentions that the Club3D adapters don't exist anymore (=the popular ones), only off-brand alternatives. VRR is not officially supported via adapters, a big problem for a gaming device.

Comment by WithinReason 1 day ago

Comment by lbschenkel 23 hours ago

I have it, it does not. Well, it may. It depends on the firmware you install on the cable. Depending on the firmware, different things will be broken. I tried them all. There's no version that will consistently support 2160p@120 and 4:4:4/RGB and HDR and VRR, and without random handshake issues.

Comment by WithinReason 20 hours ago

Good to know!

Comment by jay_kyburz 1 day ago

err, that's what Valve is doing?

Comment by eqvinox 1 day ago

Well, only for the extremes where you'd need HDMI 2.1. 99% of HDMI displays will work without issue...

Comment by devmor 1 day ago

From the context I have, this complaint arose via development of the new (2025) Steam Machine.

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by bsimpson 1 day ago

I frequently see comments that say the TV companies are the ones getting the royalties, so I looked it up.

According to Gemini, the royalties go to the _original_ HDMI founders. That includes Sony, Panasonic, Philips, and Toshiba. It does not include Samsung, or LG.

Comment by lpcvoid 1 day ago

Is there a non-LLM source for that?

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

So why can't Samsung and LG do more do improve this mess and put USB 4 / DisplayPort in all their TVs?

Comment by d3Xt3r 1 day ago

There's no financial incentive. No other mass consumer device besides PCs use DisplayPort, heck, even PCs generally have an HDMI port. So the percentage of TV buyers who actually need to use DisplayPort (basically Linux users) would be a very very very small minority.

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

I'd assume if they aren't part of HDMI cartel as the above post suggests, they are paying patent fees for this garbage.

And they are in a good position to unblock this situation by increasing adoption of patent free alternatives, therefore I don't see why they wouldn't have an incentive to avoid paying.

So I'd rather see them as somehow complicit then, instead of having no incentive in this case.

Comment by d3Xt3r 1 day ago

They have to pay the fees regardless, since no TV would sell if it didn't have an HDMI port. So unless the TV manufacturers can also convince set-top box makers, game console manufacturers, Blu-Ray makers etc to include DisplayPort, they'll need to continue including an HDMI port.

So this needs to be an industry-wide switch, not just TV makers.

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

For now, but that doesn't stop them from nudging things in the direction where HDMI will become obsolete by doing their part. I.e. it's not an instant thing, but each step in that direction helps and they can make a pretty significant one.

So the argument of no incentives just doesn't make sense, but it's a gradual process to get there. Unless their bean counters only understand super short term incentives. Then they should be blamed too for why things aren't improving in this regard.

Comment by mcpeepants 1 day ago

The incentive seems very thin/weak. Pay extra now to push DP adoption and hope that in ~10-15 years you can drop the HDMI port? Meanwhile you still pay the cartel, and they invest your money directly against your interests. And it all hinges on predicting consumer adoption which is nearly impossible. I honestly don’t see how they could justify making such a step in that direction let alone a significant one.

Comment by Dagonfly 1 day ago

For DP adoption it's too late. They should push for USB4 / Thunderbolt 4 instead. We are in the phase where about every new laptop has USB4. Connecting your laptop/phone to a TV might be a selling point. I'd love that for hotel TVs.

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

That's a catch 22 / circular argument that can always be used to excuse inaction, but it's not a real argument. Yes, it's a long term problem to solve and has many moving parts. But if they don't solve their part, they are only slowing it down even more. Any contribution to move things forward moves things forward, and lack of it delays things.

I.e. if you are saying "we feed the cartel, let's not do anything about it, since doing anything will only potentially help later, so we still need to feed the cartel in in the interim" doesn't really stand any argument grounds. I.e. feed the cartel and do nothing is worse than feed the cartel and do what you can to stop that over time.

And their piece of this is pretty big (huge portion of TV market), that's why they in particular should be asked more than others, why they aren't doing their part.

Comment by nemothekid 1 day ago

It's not so much that it's a catch 22, its that there's no financial incentive for them. TVs are a low margin item already, and Samsung/LG get their margin by being brand names and advertising fancy features.

I doubt they would meaningfully save money over investing in DP, and the opportunity cost is greater for them to spend that money on the next "Frame" TV or whatever.

LG, Samsung and Sony are the only actual panel manufacturers and they probably bake those license fees into the panels they sell back to HDMI Forum.

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

May be, but by not solving the problem, they become part of the problem, even if they aren't part of HDMI cartel directly. So it's their fault too problems like above happen.

Comment by barbazoo 1 day ago

Because the number of people that care about this is so low that it doesn't affect their sales.

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

That doesn't explain why they wouldn't want to get rid of HDMI to avoid paying patent fees for it. Adding USB 4 / DP to their TVs is a major step in that direction.

Comment by ranguna 1 day ago

Interesting, did the llm provide the sources for that info ?

Comment by lobf 1 day ago

We're really just relying on LLMs to tell us things with no verification now?

Comment by WithinReason 1 day ago

I verified it with Grok, it says the same thing

Comment by lpcvoid 20 hours ago

If you think this is proof of it being true, then I am both worried and astonished. How about looking for the information yourself, instead of relying on LLMs? This is HN I thought?!

Comment by WithinReason 19 hours ago

I'm sure 2 LLMs wouldn't hallucinate the same thing, especially when using RAG, so I'm confident in the accuracy in the information.

Comment by Etheryte 1 day ago

Please don't post random LLM slop on HN, there's more than enough of it on the internet as is. The value of HN is the human discussion. Everyone here is capable of using an LLM if they so desire.

Comment by oompydoompy74 1 day ago

I’ve been looking for a DisplayPort to HDMI cable to get around this on our household couch gaming computer. I have been unable to find one sketchy or otherwise that can handle high refresh rate and 4:4:4 color.

Comment by eqvinox 1 day ago

https://www.club-3d.com/shop/cac-1088-1223 (https://geizhals.eu/club-3d-aktiver-adapter-cac-1088-a331004...)

https://www.club-3d.com/shop/cac-1087-1128 (3m cable version)

DP 1.4 → HDMI 2.1. Apparently they're no longer being manufactured (?? - not sure that's correct), so get one while it's still possible...

[Ed.: accidentally linked another adapter that is the other direction. Added 3m & direct manufacturer links.]

Comment by oompydoompy74 1 day ago

Ty for the links! I’ll look into this.

Comment by BonoboIO 1 day ago

What a road down the memory lane… Club 3D GPUs in the early 2000s

Comment by bsimpson 1 day ago

FWIW, most USB docks are effectively this. DP goes in via USB-C and HDMI comes out the other end.

I bought one from UGREEN on Amazon. I think it's called the 9 in 1. It does 4k@60 with HDR, coming out of SteamOS.

Comment by usrusr 1 day ago

But are there any that don't overheat when you try to funnel dual screens through the USB-C/TB4?

The only setup I have that doesn't is a super minimal one that has a single DP out that feeds a daisy-chain (and a single USB out that feeds a simple hub for low bandwidth peripherals, and a PD in). Unfortunately, most of the screen pairs that I run don't do daisy-chain.

Every other hub I tried eventually got me to give up and connect one of the screens through direct HDMI.

Comment by eqvinox 1 day ago

The key is to not use TB4; that's far more energy intensive to handle than DP1.4 alt mode (+ MST for 2 displays). Basically the dock needs to be a little shitty and not have too many features...

Comment by d3Xt3r 1 day ago

But does it support VRR?

Comment by oompydoompy74 1 day ago

I’ve never thought about trying a dock. Thanks!

Comment by Anonyneko 1 day ago

I usually go for Cable Matters cables, they tend to be of a decent quality and follow the specs well. UGREEN is supposedly a reliable option too, though I cannot personally vouch as I haven't used their cables in particular.

Comment by mizzack 1 day ago

VMM7100 based devices like the Cable Matters 102101 work. Also allegedly CH7218 based adapters. https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/amd/-/issues/4773

Comment by klipklop 1 day ago

Going to be watching this ticket for sure.

Comment by cubefox 1 day ago

According to the article, these adapters generally don't support VRR.

Comment by swiftcoder 1 day ago

I think the article is honestly a little outdated on this point. The last couple of years the adapter market has caught up pretty well.

The UGREEN 8K@60Hz Display Port to HDMI Adapter I have sitting here supports g-sync (and claims support for freesync).

Comment by cubefox 1 day ago

I mean the article is two days old, so perhaps not that outdated. There also seems to be a difference between G-sync, Freesync, and HDMI VRR.

Comment by klipklop 1 day ago

Why does everybody seem to overlook this?

Comment by eqvinox 1 day ago

I'd say because most people don't care about VRR...

Comment by cubefox 21 hours ago

People who buy Valve's Steam Machine should care though, because they will get bad frame rates without VRR.

Comment by eqvinox 13 hours ago

The frame rate won't really be any different, there'll just be a little bit of extra delay until you can actually see the frame that was just rendered, and maybe some barely detectable stutters. Keep in mind we're talking 4K120 or 8K here, the GPU in the Steam Machine is nowhere near fast enough for either of these things. It's likely that there's always some mode with a higher fixed frame rate than what the GPU can calculate, even on Full HD you can probably just do fixed p120 or p144.

VRR is all about smoothness/microstutters, not higher frame rate/performance.

Comment by molave 1 day ago

I'm tired, boss.

The winning move is not to play. The HDMI Forum (and other orgs that behave similarly) prey on our desire for the most/best/(insert superlative here). I get that there's no free lunch. It is also true you see a lot of initiatives and projects do a lot of collective good while demanding much less.

Comment by ho_schi 1 day ago

Kill HDMI, a bad standard from entertainment industry (Sony).

Use DisplayPort (VESA), integrated into USB Type-C (USB-IF). Anyway better, a flawless with HiDPI and FreeSync.

Comment by drnick1 1 day ago

Someone should just leak the driver anonymously for everyone to use, and Valve can always claim HDMI compatibility without actually saying it's "HDMI compliant."

Comment by jrepinc 1 day ago

Looks like Valve also needs to start making SteamTV, just a TV without any "smart" spyware/adware OS. Until then.. this blackfriday I ordered a TV that by miracle even has a DisplayPort input (Hisense 65U8Q). Unfortunately still "smart" TV but at least it does not have US-based OS but European made VIDAA which hopefully provides much less spyware than the US-alternatives, if it properly respects the EU GDPR laws. Hopefully Hisense starts/inspires a bigger movement towards DisplayPort and this HDMI mafia dies as soon as possible.

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

They could also potentially sidestep the issue by designing a discrete DisplayPort to HDMI chip into the system, so the HDMI 2.1+ implementation is firewalled from the open source stack. Maybe next time, if the HDMI Forum still hasn't budged by then.

Comment by mizzack 1 day ago

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

Yeah, the chip they used isn't ideal though because it converts DP1.4 (32Gbit) to HDMI 2.1 (48Gbit), so the bandwidth is bottlenecked on the input side. Ideally you'd want a chip which takes DP2.1, which I'm not sure exists yet, and the upcoming Steam Machine only supports DP1.4 so it wouldn't have helped in that case anyway.

Comment by ZeroCool2u 1 day ago

Imagine a Steam TV with the Steam Box simply built-in. That would be incredibly nice. The worst part of my brand new LG G5 OLED TV is the software itself. I'd pay a good deal more to have Valve responsible for the software running on my TV.

Comment by cosmic_cheese 1 day ago

It might be nice for a little while, but the PC component is going to age much more poorly than the display will.

I think the better move would be for Valve to make a really nice gamer-oriented dumb TV that's essentially a 50"+ monitor. Kind of like those BFGDs (Big Format Gaming Displays) sans the exorbitant prices. The size of a Steam Box is in comparison quite diminutive, so finding a place to put it shouldn't be too much of an issue and the ability to swap it out for a newer model with the same screen 5+ years down the road would be nice.

Comment by jrepinc 1 day ago

And even better make it as open as Steam Deck/Machine and allow to install any GNU/Linux distribution onto it maybe even something with KDE Plasma Bigscreen or something similar if desired.

Comment by undersuit 1 day ago

You can get TVs with a "PC slot" like the Sharp M431-2. Just need a Steam Slot.

Comment by kaelwd 1 day ago

That's only 60Hz though. Are there any dumb TVs with 120+ Hz VRR and HDR?

Comment by yjftsjthsd-h 1 day ago

Is this an actual thing people can buy, or only companies?

Comment by undersuit 1 day ago

I see one for sale at B&H Photo Video.

Comment by vel0city 1 day ago

There's actually a quasi-standard of TV-compute unit interface made for industrial displays. This could be really nice for things like steam cards that could just slot into TVs with whatever performance you need.

https://youtu.be/q9a3dCd1SQI

Comment by aydyn 1 day ago

Does it really matter that much? Get a $20 roku or google tv stick or whatever you're comfortable with and don't connect the TV OS.

Comment by ninth_ant 1 day ago

My recent-model Samsung TV repeatedly opens a pop-up info window about their AI features while my AppleTV is playing movies and shows.

So I didn’t connect the TV OS and it’s still thrown in my face. It’s not the end of the world to have to find the tv remote and dismiss a popup every few days, but I sure would welcome competition who doesn’t try this sort of nonsense.

Comment by drewg123 1 day ago

Thank you. I was shopping for a TV to use as a display device for an Apple TV. I was considering a Samsung, but now I no longer am.

Comment by zamadatix 1 day ago

I've found you have to stay granular, i.e. to the model level rather than the brand level, or you end up with basically no consumer focused brand to pick from (or, even more likely, a misunderstanding that a given brand had no such problems because you didn't casually run across an example).

Comment by janc_ 1 day ago

Popping up dialogs in the middle of watching a movie sounds like a hidden manufacturing defect. That should be enough to get your money back on returning it to the shop (assuming your country has anything resembling consumer protection laws).

Comment by kotaKat 1 day ago

The TV manufacturers still make it highly annoying to avoid their integrated bullshit now. The setting to launch an LG WebOS TV into its last input on power-on is buried under 'advanced settings' several menus deep.

They would rather launch you into their home hub full of preinstalled apps even if it's not online...

... and the thing came with Microsoft Copilot installed, and you couldn't uninstall it, either.

The future!

Comment by amarant 1 day ago

The trick is to not buy a "TV".

Get a really big computer monitor/screen, and put it where you'd normally put your TV.

Comment by forbiddenlake 1 day ago

This trick unfortunately falls down above a certain size, especially if you want to game at a good fps, and stay in the consumer space (price) rather than the commercial display space. That gigabyte 45 inch is too small to use above your fireplace and view across the living room.

In my case I compromised on needing 4k, and got an lg 65 inch with only HDMI.

Comment by pete5x5 1 day ago

I have been doing A/V systems professionally for many years and the best system I have found recently is a Sony TV with an Apple TV. No sign-in needed for the TV for basic setup, can be easily set to come on to a particular input, works well with the Apple remote, and functions well with no internet with just a little corner pop-up saying "no internet" when you first turn it on.

You should update the TV when you first unbox it (ideally via ethernet) and then disconnect it. If you don't like Apple TV then your streaming box of choice.

Comment by toast0 1 day ago

> You should update the TV when you first unbox it (ideally via ethernet) and then disconnect it. If you don't like Apple TV then your streaming box of choice.

Can you update via USB? I know my (couple years old now) Samsung TVs have firmware downloads available so you don't even need to connect the TV to anything.

Comment by cosmic_cheese 1 day ago

Yes. I've owned a couple Android-based Sony TVs in the past decade and they both support updating firmware via USB thumb. They also support installing/removing packages with ADB, just like one would with an Android phone, in the case that there's some offline app you want to use on it. The newer models also do a neat thing where if you have external speakers hooked up, its internal speakers can be repurposed for center channel audio which is super cool.

I'll echo the Apple TV + Sony TV combo. It's very solid.

Comment by bee_rider 1 day ago

Apple + Sony sounds like a pretty nice combo, although unsurprisingly, right? It is a combination of premium brands. (Of course often premium brands are actually garbage in a nice shell, so maybe it is surprisingly not surprisingly bad, haha).

Comment by Marsymars 1 day ago

> You should update the TV when you first unbox it (ideally via ethernet) and then disconnect it.

You also need to wipe the storage cache for the launcher app after disconnecting to get rid of the junky ads that get downloaded.

Comment by intrasight 1 day ago

Are projectors the alternative?

Comment by zamadatix 1 day ago

Projectors can be an option but the price point to get anything comparably good in terms of picture quality puts you squarely back in commercial TV pricing.

Comment by trvz 1 day ago

I don’t own a TV, but would’ve bought a LG just because of webOS if I finally decided to get one. But if it comes with uninstallable Microsoft apps, that changes it.

Comment by jrepinc 1 day ago

Yup LG was one of my contenders, but once I found out about this MS junk it was immediately off the list.

Comment by zamadatix 1 day ago

Out of curiosity, what was the attraction around webOS?

Comment by kotaKat 1 day ago

Comment by Mindwipe 1 day ago

You can literally click to boot into "dumb mode" on all modern Google TVs such as Sony once and forget about it.

Comment by unethical_ban 1 day ago

If Steam could find a good OEM to partner with, I would buy it in a heartbeat.

I don't know if any of the monitor manufacturers have an incentive to help Steam produce an ad-free, open-spec monitor/television.

Comment by Velocifyer 23 hours ago

This website seems to have “pay for privacy” because you have to pay to not have trackers.

Comment by tkuraku 20 hours ago

I have had nothing but issues with HDMI. Doing development and trying to integrate HDMI into a hardware design. Everything should just be Display Port. No question. It is a racket.

Comment by VerifiedReports 1 day ago

Ugh. It's sad we're still saddled with HDMI at all, when DisplayPort has always been better.

Comment by shmerl 1 day ago

HDMI forum is a frontend for the cartel that profits from HDMI patents. Everyone should use USB 4 / DisplayPort instead and HDMI should go into the dustbin of history, but TV industry is slowing things down due this cartel.

Comment by rock_artist 1 day ago

Looking at recent AV1 submits on HN. It feels it’s all politics waiting for enough interests to burst.

It might take some years. But it’s not far fetch especially if big players would get into it. Let’s say Netflix interest in games gets them to buy company such as Valve and it aligns with their interests of getting some standard.

They can get TV and displays manufactures support it and end up changing the market.

But for such to happen there needs to be enough interests and incentives.

Comment by PunchyHamster 1 day ago

Need VDMI that is suspiciously similar and compatible with HDMI standard.

Comment by cxr 1 day ago

Comment by Asmod4n 1 day ago

Couldn’t AMD just release that as firmware/binary blob and call that from the open source driver to circumvent the issue?

Comment by blastersyndrome 1 day ago

Legally speaking, what is stopping someone from just reverse-engineering the specification and publishing it online somewhere?

Comment by superxpro12 1 day ago

Probably a lawyer with little legal standing that is however funded by a very large checkbook.

Comment by Avamander 1 day ago

I suspect there isn't anything really stopping them (especially in the EU) except threats.

Comment by waysa 1 day ago

Adapting DP to HDMI using the Synaptics VMM7100 chip is apparently the best (most feature complete) workaround for now. It's the same one that Intel uses in their Arc GPUs.

Comment by preisschild 1 day ago

Is this the one in the Cable Matters 102101-BLK DP->HDMI adapter?

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by Aachen 1 day ago

Article without GDPR-noncompliant consent wall: https://archive.is/8ED2m

Comment by irusensei 1 day ago

For PCs I go for DisplayPort or USB-C on devices nowadays. The DisplayPort connector has the advantage of being good with a clipping mechanism.

Comment by modeless 1 day ago

This is fundamentally about DRM, isn't it? There is a working open source implementation already, but the HDMI cartel won't allow an open source implementation to have the encryption keys required to interface with the DRM in existing devices?

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

Source devices aren't required to output a DRM'ed signal though, are they? I think the DRM is only required on the receiver side. In that case a compliant source wouldn't need any keys, and besides, that wasn't a blocker for the previous HDMI versions which supported DRM too.

Comment by modeless 1 day ago

IIUC they're required to do a handshake involving encryption. Which is a form of DRM to enforce centralized control over the device ecosystem even if the subsequent video signals are not encrypted.

Comment by janc_ 1 day ago

That sounds like an anti-competitive action by a near-monopoly player…

Comment by freeopinion 1 day ago

I always choose DP. I didn't even know there was this issue with HDMI.

Comment by jonny_eh 1 day ago

Is the a USB-C/Thunderbolt to HDMI 2.1 dongle? Send Displayport and audio over USB-C and then let that hardware handle the HDMI handshaking.

Comment by klipklop 1 day ago

There isn't one that supports VRR/Gsync/Freesync well. What gamers want is chroma/RGB 4:4:4 + HDR + VRR/Freesync + 4k,120hz for their Linux PC on a TV. This is not possible with any DP --> HDMI 2.1 dongle on the market. They need support at the driver level to make this work. This is what the idiots at the HDMI forum are blocking. The only way to have high quality visuals on a PC/TV setup is to run Windows. That really sucks.

Comment by sunshowers 1 day ago

I do actually have this setup going with a Cable Matters adapter [1] + a custom firmware I found [2] and

> chroma/RGB 4:4:4 + HDR + VRR/Freesync + 4k,120hz for their Linux PC on a TV

works great now on my LG C4 TV with Bazzite's gaming mode, though:

* 144Hz is unstable

* 12-bit color is unstable (10-bit works fine), and gamescope doesn't have a way to limit color depth (kwin does), so I had to put in place an EDID override

* in the EDID, limiting the FreeSync range to 60-120Hz (which should still allow frame doubling/tripling) seemed to be better -- the default 40Hz caused a bit of flickering because the AMD driver would drop the refresh rate down to 38.5Hz or so.

Should write about this in more detail.

[1] https://www.amazon.com/dp/B094XR43M5

[2] https://forum.level1techs.com/t/it-is-possible-to-4k-120-hdr...

Comment by klipklop 1 day ago

I can't edit now, but it seems that there is a new dongle on the market that might be able to do this with some changes (whitelists?) to the AMDGPU driver in Linux.

Comment by Fire-Dragon-DoL 1 day ago

This is terrible.

Aren't there on the market big "pc monitors" instead of tvs?

Comment by raggi 1 day ago

Not with good measured performance no. There are some which advertise good numbers (such as high refresh rates) but are unable to drive the panels to visibly change pixels at anywhere near the refresh rate.

Comment by agoodusername63 1 day ago

I just use a DisplayPort to hdmi cable. Works well on my 4k@120 TV

Comment by utf_8x 1 day ago

Can we just give up on HDMI and start putting DisplayPort on TVs already?

Comment by aryonoco 1 day ago

Great news. HDMI can just go and die. If the HdMI Forum really thinks it’s bigger than Linux, it’s wrong. While category of devices in this space are just Linux only. Eventually, they’ll add a DP port, eventually (10 years later)

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by 1 day ago

Comment by henearkr 1 day ago

What is preventing the emergence of an open source project providing the HDMI 2.1 bytecode ready to be downloaded into a FPGA, giving any Linux user the possibility to very easily DIY an adapter? Or even sell and ship the hardware without any loaded bytecode, and then users load it beforehand?

Comment by seemaze 1 day ago

more like HDM-Bye!

Comment by thewtf 1 day ago

[dead]

Comment by Ecko123 1 day ago

[dead]

Comment by TechSquidTV 1 day ago

No one wants HDMI. No one.

Comment by bee_rider 1 day ago

Other than the TV, although its opinion carries a lot of weight in this discussion unfortunately.

Comment by PunchyHamster 1 day ago

I think that's more forced to by inertia, and the HDMI push for mandatory DRM

Comment by efreak 1 day ago

My monitor works fine with HDMI It worked fine with VGA and DVI as well (it has all four, but my current PC doesn't have DVI or VGA outputs). It works fine with Displayport...until I turn it off, and then it won't go back on. I could solve this by connecting the monitor with HDMI, but this is my secondary monitor; my primary is an older but nicer (16:10, brighter, etc) monitor that only has DVI and VGA, while my PC only has DP and HDMI outputs, and the only adapter I've found that works with them is the HDMI-DVI adapter I use, leaving me only DP to connect my secondary.

This is the process I have to go through to get my monitor working after turning it off when connected through displayport:

1. Turn off the computer (I'm not clear if fast shutdown or hibernate has any effect here) 2. Unplug the computer (or switch off the PSU) 3. Press the power button (to speed up the next step slightly) 4. Wait for residual power to drain from the motherboard (30s-3 minutes) 5. Reconnect computer to power 6. Turn PC back on

If I don't fully shut down the computer, such that it reinitializes the displays completely, it never recognizes that there's a monitor attached to displayport. My understanding is that this is because the DID (or equivalent) is powered by the monitor itself, and not by the computer, and when you turn off the monitor (as I do at night to keep the bright-af led off; this also prevents Windows from waking the display every few hours but that can be done by disabling the monitor with Win+P), somewhere between the OS and the motherboard the logical port gets completely shut down until a full reset.