A computer components & hardware forum. HardwareBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » HardwareBanter forum » General Hardware & Peripherals » General
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

J5 Create USB to HDMI Device



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old June 28th 13, 04:53 PM posted to alt.comp.hardware
JCO
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

System: Older PC Running XP Home with all updates.

Does anybody have experience using this device?

I want to move an old computer upstairs and place it next to the TV where it
can be connected to my TV. This will allow me to watch downloaded videos on
the TV from the computer. Typically, if connected with an HDMI cable, I
should be able to get video and sound to the TV.

I can get Internet via wireless card but don't have an HDMI connection on
the computer. The computer only has standard PCI Slots (no AGP and no PCI
Express). I don't want to dump to much money into the system but a standard
PCI video card with HDMI output would be ideal. Having no luck finding this
PCI card, I ran across the "J5 Create USB to HDMI" Connector. The problem
is that I have never read anything that says sound will transfer from via
HDMI from the computer to the TV.

Does anyone know if sound, along with the video, be transferred through this
HDMI cable so that my TV will display and use the TV Speakers?

Thanks

  #2  
Old June 28th 13, 05:28 PM posted to alt.comp.hardware
Pen
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 205
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

On 6/28/2013 11:53 AM, JCO wrote:
J5 Create USB to HDMI

http://www.j5create.com/our-products...rs/jua250.html

Watch the wrap. The specs say no. You get Audio from the
Audio jack and plug that into your TV external Audio input.
See ~Interface section under the Specifications section.
  #3  
Old June 28th 13, 06:24 PM posted to alt.comp.hardware
Paul
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 13,364
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

JCO wrote:
System: Older PC Running XP Home with all updates.

Does anybody have experience using this device?

I want to move an old computer upstairs and place it next to the TV
where it can be connected to my TV. This will allow me to watch
downloaded videos on the TV from the computer. Typically, if connected
with an HDMI cable, I should be able to get video and sound to the TV.

I can get Internet via wireless card but don't have an HDMI connection
on the computer. The computer only has standard PCI Slots (no AGP and
no PCI Express). I don't want to dump to much money into the system but
a standard PCI video card with HDMI output would be ideal. Having no
luck finding this PCI card, I ran across the "J5 Create USB to HDMI"
Connector. The problem is that I have never read anything that says
sound will transfer from via HDMI from the computer to the TV.

Does anyone know if sound, along with the video, be transferred through
this HDMI cable so that my TV will display and use the TV Speakers?

Thanks


Would a media extender work ?

"WD TV Live Media Player WDBHG70000NBK-HESN"
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16822136997

Read the customer reviews first, to see what it can do.

I think there's even a user manual link on that page.

*******

The USB to HDMI adapters, the older ones didn't really support video
playback. The data on the cable was compressed by the CPU, and USB2
was too slow for video. There are some USB3 versions now, and a
recent review said you could watch video OK. But then, the computer
might need a decent CPU, to do all of that work to push video
to the TV set.

*******

I would also take a second look, at the back of the TV set, and
at the connectors on the computer, to see if there is some other
interconnect method that might work.

To give an example, I have a DVD player that has composite on
the back. I have a TV set with composite-in. Running a coax, the
picture looks terrible (probably a DC restoration problem). Now,
if I stick a Radio Shack RF modulator in the path (DVD player
to RF modulator, RF modulator to antenna terminal on the TV set),
I actually get a better looking picture, than if using direct
composite connection. So that's how I chose to get a picture to
a really cheesy TV set. If yours has HDMI, it might have
some other connectors that would mate with the computer.
(VGA, YPbPr component)

And the computer, having only a PCI bus, may be too weak to
play all possible movie formats. Even my computer, the CPU
usage varies anywhere from 15% to 100%, for playing the same
video file, with a number of different player applications.
So the thing is, if the computer has a weak CPU, there might
not be any point of even bothering with cabling and toys.
Test the computer first, to see if it has enough
horsepower for the job.

If you use something other than HDMI, then you can just
use the analog sound output on the computer. Run a
1/8" stereo male cable to dual RCA (Cinch) on the other
end, and use that to get audio into the TV set.

Paul
  #4  
Old June 29th 13, 01:03 AM posted to alt.comp.hardware
JCO
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

You are correct. Thanks for the help.
I will continue to look for a video card instead.

"Paul" wrote in message ...

JCO wrote:
System: Older PC Running XP Home with all updates.

Does anybody have experience using this device?

I want to move an old computer upstairs and place it next to the TV
where it can be connected to my TV. This will allow me to watch
downloaded videos on the TV from the computer. Typically, if connected
with an HDMI cable, I should be able to get video and sound to the TV.

I can get Internet via wireless card but don't have an HDMI connection
on the computer. The computer only has standard PCI Slots (no AGP and
no PCI Express). I don't want to dump to much money into the system but
a standard PCI video card with HDMI output would be ideal. Having no
luck finding this PCI card, I ran across the "J5 Create USB to HDMI"
Connector. The problem is that I have never read anything that says
sound will transfer from via HDMI from the computer to the TV.

Does anyone know if sound, along with the video, be transferred through
this HDMI cable so that my TV will display and use the TV Speakers?

Thanks


Would a media extender work ?

"WD TV Live Media Player WDBHG70000NBK-HESN"
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16822136997

Read the customer reviews first, to see what it can do.

I think there's even a user manual link on that page.

*******

The USB to HDMI adapters, the older ones didn't really support video
playback. The data on the cable was compressed by the CPU, and USB2
was too slow for video. There are some USB3 versions now, and a
recent review said you could watch video OK. But then, the computer
might need a decent CPU, to do all of that work to push video
to the TV set.

*******

I would also take a second look, at the back of the TV set, and
at the connectors on the computer, to see if there is some other
interconnect method that might work.

To give an example, I have a DVD player that has composite on
the back. I have a TV set with composite-in. Running a coax, the
picture looks terrible (probably a DC restoration problem). Now,
if I stick a Radio Shack RF modulator in the path (DVD player
to RF modulator, RF modulator to antenna terminal on the TV set),
I actually get a better looking picture, than if using direct
composite connection. So that's how I chose to get a picture to
a really cheesy TV set. If yours has HDMI, it might have
some other connectors that would mate with the computer.
(VGA, YPbPr component)

And the computer, having only a PCI bus, may be too weak to
play all possible movie formats. Even my computer, the CPU
usage varies anywhere from 15% to 100%, for playing the same
video file, with a number of different player applications.
So the thing is, if the computer has a weak CPU, there might
not be any point of even bothering with cabling and toys.
Test the computer first, to see if it has enough
horsepower for the job.

If you use something other than HDMI, then you can just
use the analog sound output on the computer. Run a
1/8" stereo male cable to dual RCA (Cinch) on the other
end, and use that to get audio into the TV set.

Paul
  #5  
Old June 29th 13, 02:19 AM posted to alt.comp.hardware
John McGaw
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 732
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

On 6/28/2013 11:53 AM, JCO wrote:
System: Older PC Running XP Home with all updates.

Does anybody have experience using this device?

I want to move an old computer upstairs and place it next to the TV where
it can be connected to my TV. This will allow me to watch downloaded
videos on the TV from the computer. Typically, if connected with an HDMI
cable, I should be able to get video and sound to the TV.

I can get Internet via wireless card but don't have an HDMI connection on
the computer. The computer only has standard PCI Slots (no AGP and no PCI
Express). I don't want to dump to much money into the system but a
standard PCI video card with HDMI output would be ideal. Having no luck
finding this PCI card, I ran across the "J5 Create USB to HDMI" Connector.
The problem is that I have never read anything that says sound will
transfer from via HDMI from the computer to the TV.

Does anyone know if sound, along with the video, be transferred through
this HDMI cable so that my TV will display and use the TV Speakers?

Thanks


Why not consider the easy cheap way:

http://www.amazon.com/Etekcity-Video.../ref=pd_cp_e_0

Any USB port on your antique computer is not going to have the bandwidth to
produce real HDMI video, not to mention the problems with audio. This
device (which I've not used) handles the upscaling and audio encoding ad
connector conversion in a single step.
  #6  
Old June 29th 13, 05:58 AM posted to alt.comp.hardware
Paul
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 13,364
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

JCO wrote:
You are correct. Thanks for the help.
I will continue to look for a video card instead.


Yes, you can get the video card.

Geforce 210 (PCI bridged) $55

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814187206

HD 5450 (PCI bridged) $70

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814131436

The PCI cards are a bit more expensive than the PCI Express
ones of the same design. You can get cards for $30 or $40
at the low end of PCI Express.

(Don't get the oldest of the cards, like an old ATI 7000, as
they have next to no hardware features. For video playback,
those old cards amount to just a frame buffer.)

The two examples above, are of relatively recent design, so have
UVD or PureVideo. The only problem with that, is the driver
for the video card, can sense it is working with the PCI
bridged version, and the driver writers decide to turn off
features like 3:2 pulldown, due to the amount of data (megabytes/sec)
that have to move through the PCI slot. But other than that, I think
you could whip together a solution with a card like that. Since
the PCI slot, on a good day, can move only 110MB/sec, that
really crimps data movement. Much of UVD or PureVideo decoding
stays inside the video card (which is good), which does not
explain why data-full parts of it, end up on the PCI bus.

UVD and PureVideo, help with movie decoding on popular formats.
Which is why they might be worth having, if your CPU isn't
that strong. And those cards are also relatively low-power.
(If you have stability issue with a fan-less card, just point
an 80mm fan at it - I needed to do that with one of my
fanless FX5200 cards years ago.)

*******

HD 5450 has UVD 2.2. A HD 6450 might have UVD 3, but then,
we don't see PCI cards with those onboard.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UVD

A Geforce 210 is VP4.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purevideo

If you need some imaginative marketing material, you
can flip through this. It didn't really help me, as I
was looking for the chart of what features are turned off.

http://www.nvidia.com/content/purevi..._Guide_2_8.pdf

This is the kind of chart I was looking for, but it's out
of date. Based on the comment at the bottom of the chart,
there are still some parts of video decoding, done by the
CPU and not by the video card. And since that pulls a lot
of data through the PCI slot, such features have to be turned
off on PCI bus.

http://www.nvidia.com/docs/CP/11036/...Comparison.pdf

"Enabling Inverse Telecine, Noise Reduction and Edge Enhancements
simultaneously requires additional processing power and may not
be possible without dropping frames on some graphics cards"

Of course, getting any acceleration from the video card, is
a bonus, rather than the CPU doing all of it. If you have
gutless PCs (and I have a few), one of those video cards
can help make an HTPC out of it.

So when you shop for the video card, try to get a "buzzword
compliant" card, with more options to aid in video decoding.
An ancient ATI 7000 card may be cheaper, but not as capable.

HTH,
Paul
  #7  
Old July 2nd 13, 08:19 PM posted to alt.comp.hardware
JCO
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

Awesome choices. Thanks guys.

"John McGaw" wrote in message
...

On 6/28/2013 11:53 AM, JCO wrote:
System: Older PC Running XP Home with all updates.

Does anybody have experience using this device?

I want to move an old computer upstairs and place it next to the TV where
it can be connected to my TV. This will allow me to watch downloaded
videos on the TV from the computer. Typically, if connected with an HDMI
cable, I should be able to get video and sound to the TV.

I can get Internet via wireless card but don't have an HDMI connection on
the computer. The computer only has standard PCI Slots (no AGP and no PCI
Express). I don't want to dump to much money into the system but a
standard PCI video card with HDMI output would be ideal. Having no luck
finding this PCI card, I ran across the "J5 Create USB to HDMI" Connector.
The problem is that I have never read anything that says sound will
transfer from via HDMI from the computer to the TV.

Does anyone know if sound, along with the video, be transferred through
this HDMI cable so that my TV will display and use the TV Speakers?

Thanks


Why not consider the easy cheap way:

http://www.amazon.com/Etekcity-Video.../ref=pd_cp_e_0

Any USB port on your antique computer is not going to have the bandwidth to
produce real HDMI video, not to mention the problems with audio. This
device (which I've not used) handles the upscaling and audio encoding ad
connector conversion in a single step.

  #8  
Old July 4th 13, 12:46 AM posted to alt.comp.hardware
JCO
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

Will that 64 bit card work in a 32 bit machine running a WindowsXP 32 bits?
Thanks

"Paul" wrote in message ...

JCO wrote:
You are correct. Thanks for the help.
I will continue to look for a video card instead.


Yes, you can get the video card.

Geforce 210 (PCI bridged) $55

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814187206

HD 5450 (PCI bridged) $70

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814131436

The PCI cards are a bit more expensive than the PCI Express
ones of the same design. You can get cards for $30 or $40
at the low end of PCI Express.

(Don't get the oldest of the cards, like an old ATI 7000, as
they have next to no hardware features. For video playback,
those old cards amount to just a frame buffer.)

The two examples above, are of relatively recent design, so have
UVD or PureVideo. The only problem with that, is the driver
for the video card, can sense it is working with the PCI
bridged version, and the driver writers decide to turn off
features like 3:2 pulldown, due to the amount of data (megabytes/sec)
that have to move through the PCI slot. But other than that, I think
you could whip together a solution with a card like that. Since
the PCI slot, on a good day, can move only 110MB/sec, that
really crimps data movement. Much of UVD or PureVideo decoding
stays inside the video card (which is good), which does not
explain why data-full parts of it, end up on the PCI bus.

UVD and PureVideo, help with movie decoding on popular formats.
Which is why they might be worth having, if your CPU isn't
that strong. And those cards are also relatively low-power.
(If you have stability issue with a fan-less card, just point
an 80mm fan at it - I needed to do that with one of my
fanless FX5200 cards years ago.)

*******

HD 5450 has UVD 2.2. A HD 6450 might have UVD 3, but then,
we don't see PCI cards with those onboard.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UVD

A Geforce 210 is VP4.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purevideo

If you need some imaginative marketing material, you
can flip through this. It didn't really help me, as I
was looking for the chart of what features are turned off.

http://www.nvidia.com/content/purevi..._Guide_2_8.pdf

This is the kind of chart I was looking for, but it's out
of date. Based on the comment at the bottom of the chart,
there are still some parts of video decoding, done by the
CPU and not by the video card. And since that pulls a lot
of data through the PCI slot, such features have to be turned
off on PCI bus.

http://www.nvidia.com/docs/CP/11036/...Comparison.pdf

"Enabling Inverse Telecine, Noise Reduction and Edge Enhancements
simultaneously requires additional processing power and may not
be possible without dropping frames on some graphics cards"

Of course, getting any acceleration from the video card, is
a bonus, rather than the CPU doing all of it. If you have
gutless PCs (and I have a few), one of those video cards
can help make an HTPC out of it.

So when you shop for the video card, try to get a "buzzword
compliant" card, with more options to aid in video decoding.
An ancient ATI 7000 card may be cheaper, but not as capable.

HTH,
Paul

  #9  
Old July 4th 13, 01:52 AM posted to alt.comp.hardware
Paul
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 13,364
Default J5 Create USB to HDMI Device

JCO wrote:
Will that 64 bit card work in a 32 bit machine running a WindowsXP 32 bits?
Thanks


The cards work in 32 bit or 64 bit machines.

With any hardware, you can research the availability of
drivers, before you buy the hardware. That's how you
convince yourself, that it'll work.

This is an example of a driver download page, and
how the drivers are available for 32 bit or 64 bit
OS. Check to see if your operating system is there.

http://imageshack.us/a/img163/7726/wh6.gif

Paul
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Inspiron 6000 PCI Device Unknown In Device Manager...Help! Tragik Magik Dell Computers 6 July 17th 05 05:04 AM
Why does SATA create RAID and SCSI entries in Device Manager? Bobby General 3 March 18th 05 12:22 PM
display device \Device\Video0 got stuck in an infinite loop - SOLVED Nick Le Lievre Overclocking AMD Processors 0 November 23rd 03 06:17 AM
Unable to create Direct3d device CW Overclocking AMD Processors 3 November 9th 03 05:09 PM
Unable to create Direct3d device CW AMD Thunderbird Processors 3 November 9th 03 05:09 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:34 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 HardwareBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.