Chapter 14 Touchscreens, Projectors, and Displays

Concepts

Special considerations apply when you obtain a signal cable that is longer or of a different type than cables that we included in your product kit. For DMP models that support the following signal cable types, the maximum supported lengths are:

Composite — 10 ft (approximately 3 m)

HDMI 1.1 — 16 ft (approximately 5 m)

RCA — 10 ft (approximately 3 m)

S-Video — 10 ft (approximately 3 m)

SPDIF — 10 ft (approximately 3 m)

Note

 

When image signals are transmitted through a composite cable, image quality suffers. When you use a composite cable

 

 

and your DMP shows any web-based media, small text might be difficult to read in TVzilla (the web browser that runs on some DMP

 

 

models). To work around this limitation, you can lower the browser resolution setting in DMPDM.

 

 

 

 

 

Cable Quality

 

 

The best signal cables objectively are those with the lowest signal resistance. Factors that affect signal

 

 

resistance include wire gauge, cable shielding quality, and cable connector quality. However, the same

 

 

materials and engineering designs that reduce signal resistance add to the cost of manufacturing. This

 

 

added cost is passed along to a consumer. So, it is useful to understand when signal resistance is not

 

 

relevant. Knowing this can help you to manage and reduce expenses without necessarily lowering

 

 

your standards. High cost is not inevitable. Nor is it proof of high quality. Sometimes, in fact, high

 

 

quality (low signal resistance) is irrelevant.

 

 

Even mediocre signal cables are sometimes sufficient, and such cables are often very affordable.

 

 

Figure 14-1illustrates the most important factors to consider when you choose signal cables.

 

User Guide for Cisco Digital Media Manager 5.2.x

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Cisco Systems 5.2.x manual Cable Quality, Quality low signal resistance is irrelevant, 14-4